First Landscape shots with a Cokin Filter C/C PLEASE!!
System
Registered Users Posts: 8,186 moderator
Here's my attempt at some landscape stuff after buying a new Cokin P filter system on my way to shoot. C/C would be awesome! Would like to get some feedback because i'm trying to get into the whole landscape type of photography and could use all the help possible.. any comments on types of filters I should get and stuff like that would be appreciated.. THANKS! also, the rest of the pictures can be found here... feel free to look! http://jondraperphotography.smugmug.com/gallery/7757876_CHKWF/1/501695953_RyWa5
0
Comments
When asking for critiques it is helpful to include the EXIF data of the shots. I looked at your link and the EXIF is hidden there as well.
From these two shots though it appears you were shooting in mid day light which is a big :nono for landscape shots. The light is flat and you have foreground areas that are washed out.
The Horizon lines are also almost center of the frame and really chop the photos up. There is really not anything going on in the second shot- it is lacking a focus point or really anything to catch your eye. The boat and the sky help the first shot but the foreground is washed out and lacking detail.
That may come across as harsh but hey- I am only trying to help and you asked for it.
Keep shooting though- you will get it soon enough.
Aaron Newman
Website:www.CapturingLightandEmotion.com
Facebook: Capturing Light and Emotion
EF-S 18-55mm
EF 75-300mm
The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in having new eyes.
Sony A100: Dician VG-1 grip: Made Products Camera Armor: Sony 18-70 f3.5-5.6: Minolta 50 f1.7: Minolta 28-80 f3.5-5.6: Minolta 7-210 f4: Sigma 70-300DL f4-5.6:
Cambron 2x converter: Minolta 3500xi: SanDisk Ultra II 2GB x6: Lexar Pro 8GB x3: Cokin filter system: PSP X2:
From the second picture it looks like you are using a ND grad filter in the P holder. If that's true then it looks like you are darkening the sky to reduce the exposure. I agree with Aaron that it's not the best time of day to shoot landscapes (as I have hundreds and hundreds of shots taken at the same time of day and can personally attest to that). Best time would be sunrise/sunset to get the best light. That said, sometimes you just don't have the opportunities to shoot at those times for a variety of reasons so you have to make the most of what you have.
In the second shot you are darkening the sky but you still have the large bright area in the water. There is some nice detail in the foreground and the sky but it's being overwhelmed by the bright areas. Maybe try and push the filter down farther (if possible) to darken those areas. An alternative would be that if you are shooting Raw you can selectively reduce the exposure in the brighter areas to bring out details there and balance the exposure a little. Or take multiple shots at different exposures (if on a tripod) and selectively blend them later. There are a lot of different techniques you can try separately or in tandem to get what you want.
Keep shooting...
Website: Tom Price Photography
Blog: Capturing Photons
Facebook: Tom Price Photography
I agree the GND filter is made for sunsets/sunrises on a horizontal plane
I have the set up and love it. This is an image that would be impossible without it (because of dynamic range).
Rags