This idea being I will show before and after from the original RAW file I shot against the final image I posted, with a small description of what I did and why, hopefully this will help beginers learn how to take a good image, and make it a great one, and in some cases, do the thing we're not supposed to and make a bad image a good one with fancy processing, whoops! I mean yes, its important to get it right in camera, uhuh!
Sunday, 6 November 2011
Saturday, 15 October 2011
Canon 60D and EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM.
Thursday, 25 August 2011
Twycross Zoo 2010



Wednesday, 6 July 2011
One WIth Nature


Saturday, 18 June 2011
6,7,8 & 9




5 - Florida BIrd


Monday, 9 March 2009
Photo 04 - All About Contrast Pt. 2
Took this one last summer at Warwick Castle. Canon 400D and EF-S 55-250 IS

Its a bit muted like the other, doesn't have the darks I wanted. Also I didnt like the composition as it was too similer to another I had, so as i missed the square crop, I tried that, seemed quite appealing to me. Took some empty space out of the top, filled the frame entirely.

This is the result

Sunday, 15 February 2009
Photo 3 - All About Contrast


I don't have any lightroom settings because this is from the stone age of using photoshop, but its fairly easy to see whats going on here.
The original JPEG is overly muted, neutral and boring, so i brought in the dark and brought out the colours, Then using layers and masks, I darkened the background and lightened the plant for the contrast and seperation. The proccessed image works because its telling you where to look, and where not to. This is how dodgy photoshop jobs still make it through the cracks into print.
If anyone actually reads this blog please email me to say and I'll keep it going.
Monday, 20 October 2008
Photo 2 - I See You
The subject is Andrew Jones, he's on flickr. I used his Samsung GX-1L DSLR with a sweet Samsung D-XENON 100mm Macro Lens at f/2.8 and a few extention tubes.
It was shot at bolton abbey, and I wish i wasnt visible in the reflection.
As Shot - 1/180th, f/2.8, ISO 200
On Flickr
Lightroom Settings
Photo 1 - Work With It!
So day one, this one is taken from a cool little place called Tropical World in Leeds, UK.
Shoot: This was shot at the long end of a 400mm equiq' lens, so you can't actually tell its in a terrible glass prison full of obviously artificial poo. The lizard was near the front glass as well, which was pretty dirty, luckily there's lots of local contrasting detail in this image to hide it.
He wasn't moving much so I had plenty of time to compose. The light was also pretty bad.
This isn't the processing of a RAW file, since I'm starting long ago when I had a bridge camera, however, we can take some hindsight from this, we can progress as I did. The file is a 7.1 MP horribly compressed JPEG from a Kodak Z712IS. Lightroom is still fine with JPEG's, although the image still has the limited fidelity compared to RAW files.
As Shot - Approx 180mm, 1/60th, f/3.6, ISO 400
On Flickr
Original Observations: So here, in the original image, the camera's auto white balance has over-compensated and made it blue-y and murky, there's little contrast and its generally a crappy image, but the content is there, the composition is pretty good so I didn't crop, although looking back I could have filled the frame even more and took at the bit of dead space at the top.
Lightroom Settings:
Lightroom Processing: White Balance is set to Auto, most of the time, Lightroom is pretty good in auto or it's a good start if your camera messed it up, more on white balance when we get to RAW files since this isn' changng the balance but altering the colours. RAW is fine to change it after the fact. Looking back, there' lots of yellow going on, I'd be tempted to try make it more eve across the gamut.
Most of the other settings of the Basics panel are self explanatory, vibrance and clarity almost always make my images better. I've yet to use saturation since joining the Lightroom revolution.
The curves is where I exerted most control over the tones, the general sign of it is that of more contrast, an 'S' curve. The background and the local contrast has lots of darks as can be seen in the graph behind the curve, so the big change in this curve apart from strong contract across the board is heavy darkening the shadows, contrasting with the other settings, really brings the lizard out of the background like in the final.
A small amount of sharpening, coupled with medium amounts of noise reduction, on an image so knackered by noise it'll never be reduced, just equals sharp spotty artifacts, i did this really wrong and a large print would be ruined by this, small on a screen a 7.1 MP image get survive this. I should have taken it into Photoshop, halved the size in pixels, and used a plug-in like Noiseware on it. More on that in the future.
Finally, the vignette, at the time, I corrected the vignette of the lens, effectively creating no vignette, this was a mistake, i should have applied a strong vignette to further focus on the lizard, this image with a dark background lends itself to this. It would have also lessened the rays from the top, which I could have also lessened by using the colur controls in lightrooms to chill out the orange's only.