First-time Lightroom edits!
manbou
Registered Users Posts: 105 Major grins
Here are my first three serious attempts to use Lightroom. I bought the Scott Kelby book and have been following its instructions on how to do stuff. I've included before and after pics for each one. Please whip mercilessly. My biggest concern is that I am giving the photos too much of a "cartoony" look, improving contrast at the expense of "naturalness". Also, maybe I am overdoing it on the vignetting a little bit.
#1: A boring posed shot. Note the blown highlights on the faces and the overall washed-out look. This perfectly generic snapshot was taken with a Canon point-and-shoot.
I tried to put more color into the picture and recover the highlights... but I don't think it worked too well.
#2: Saving an underexposed/backlit shot. This was taken with a D700 in JPEG mode.
Below, I think the person is now clearly separated from the background, but the face looks a little washed out and flat, and the hat coloring looks uneven (due to my poor skill at dodging with a trackpad).
#3: Working from RAW (the others were shot as JPEGs). This was shot with the D700 in RAW mode. I like this photo and wanted to see how good I could make it look with Lightroom.
Below, I dodged the bud better this time, using Auto Mask, but maybe it's too bright, unnaturally bright?
Well, whaddya think? :ear
#1: A boring posed shot. Note the blown highlights on the faces and the overall washed-out look. This perfectly generic snapshot was taken with a Canon point-and-shoot.
I tried to put more color into the picture and recover the highlights... but I don't think it worked too well.
#2: Saving an underexposed/backlit shot. This was taken with a D700 in JPEG mode.
Below, I think the person is now clearly separated from the background, but the face looks a little washed out and flat, and the hat coloring looks uneven (due to my poor skill at dodging with a trackpad).
#3: Working from RAW (the others were shot as JPEGs). This was shot with the D700 in RAW mode. I like this photo and wanted to see how good I could make it look with Lightroom.
Below, I dodged the bud better this time, using Auto Mask, but maybe it's too bright, unnaturally bright?
Well, whaddya think? :ear
"[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Photography is often finding something cool and taking a picture of it."[/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif] -- Ken Rockwell[/FONT]
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Comments
you can do it either in Lightroom or using using Curves in Photoshop by finding Neutral grey and removing the color cast.
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Stone Creek Photography
Equine and Historical Landscape Photographer.
New Mexico.
Become a fan of Stone Creek Photography
I will try adjusting the WB on the second one tonight.
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Stone Creek Photography
Equine and Historical Landscape Photographer.
New Mexico.
Become a fan of Stone Creek Photography
With a little experimentation, including adding some Vibrancy, Clarity and Sharpness, you may get a better overall result.