NikonGear'23
Images => Nature, Flora, Fauna & Landscapes => Topic started by: Anthony on July 12, 2018, 20:38:15
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Smoking, as usual.
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This is the place where Patalogika witch lives.
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Anthony:
Quite a striking island. I feel that the haze reduced the contrast so much, that some of the impact of the image was lost. So, a quick tweak of contrast and saturation on the island. Just an option.
Cheers
Randy
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Are those houses on the lower left ?
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Good choice to enhance the contrast. The photo still looks completely realistic, but important details are now more visible.
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Very nice! To me, the seemingly sterile symmetrical composition makes the image somewhat other-worldly.
The low contrast (against the sharply rendered ripples of the sea) makes the island look like a mirage, which rather gives the preferable effect. This is not a landscape but a nice abstraction to me.
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Thanks, all for your comments and suggestions.
Here is the embedded jpeg from the original raw. I was bouncing around on a sailing boat, shooting with Fuji X-T2/18-55 at 55, and this was the closest we came. I would have gone closer, gone ashore, but the rest of the crew were more interested in sailing than in onshore exploring.
As you can see, there was a lot of work applied to the raw file. Probably I should have applied more contrast, and thanks for the suggestion, Randy. But haze was a reality, and I decided to leave some trace of it. I am impressed with the ability of the Fuji kit zoom to capture information.
The next time I go sailing I shall include a longer lens in my luggage.
Stromboli is an active volcano. There are indeed houses on the island, and there is a population of around 500.
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If you are using Lightroom, the Dehaze feature would probably give favorable results.
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If you are using Lightroom, the Dehaze feature would probably give favorable results.
Thanks, Andrew, I used the Dehaze feature in ACR (same as LR). It helped. However, I could not push it further than I did because it started to create an unpleasant and unrealistic dark blue tone.
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It of course is always about what 'story' you are trying to tell. So, go with the presentation that tells your story the best.
I created a mask and applied the adjustments just to the island and the clouds, as the water did get unnatural looking with the dehaze filter on the entire image.
I used the Overlay blend mode and a few other minor tweaks in PS.
Cheers
Randy
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Thanks, Randy, when I used Dehaze early on in the process I found that it gave an unpleasant blue tinge to the volcano at settings of over +15.
However, applying it and applying contrast to the final version (as you have, because that is all you had to work from) seems to work well.
A lesson I draw from this is that adjustments can successfully be applied at a later stage in the process even if they have already been applied at an earlier stage.
One can never stop learning with Photoshop.
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A most interesting view of a unique volcano which emerges directly from the sea!
Regarding Dehaze:
Dehaze works by increasing Black point and contrast in distant subjects while increasing Saturation in near-by subjects.
It usually needs to be used in conjunction with several other Sliders (including Clarity, Saturation, Vibrance and Contrast) and perhaps with HSL sliders for individual colours as well.
This image is a case where you might find using an Adjustment Brush or a graduation (set for Haze reduction plus some of the other adjustments which I mentioned) on only the volcano and the sky.
Minus values of De-haze increase Whites and add the appearance of mist — which can alo be very useful if applied locally.
I find that I can often use Dehaze, in conjunction with other settings, instead of a Polariser to darken skies and even to reduce over-bright reflections. I usually avoid filters, even a polariser, because of the time it takes to mount and adjust them and the polariser only affects a relatively small arc of the image anyway.
You can also use the ACR Filter in Ps itself to make these adjustments on a duplicate and maskable Layer
Here a very contrasty image of a wet alligator which has been edited with a Graduated Adjustment:
(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-140718202314-676920.jpeg)
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Thank you, Ann, this thread is becoming very instructive for me.