New Orleans sunsets.
Boutte
Registered Users Posts: 87 Big grins
Ok, Im new here and definitely intimidated by the quality of work I see here. I recently bought my first SLR in 20 years and am still trying to figure it all out. After seeing the level of excellence displayed on this site I decided I wouldn't be posting pics here because you guys are on a different level.
But it's just not in my nature not to participate so here's what I got.
This first one was shot with a Kodak point and shoot so it's a little grainy.
This one of my first efforts with the new camera. Taken from Lakeshore Drive in New Orleans.
And a little later the same day.
But it's just not in my nature not to participate so here's what I got.
This first one was shot with a Kodak point and shoot so it's a little grainy.
This one of my first efforts with the new camera. Taken from Lakeshore Drive in New Orleans.
And a little later the same day.
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Comments
Photos that don't suck / 365 / Film & Lomography
My Photographic Adventures
Nikon D7000 | 10-20 | 50 | 55-200
For the first one, the yellow at the center looks like it's almost blown out. And the black along the bottom doesn't add much for me.
I like sunsets to have a more panoramic feel to them (personal oddity I freely admit). So, just to see what would happen, I toned down the highlights in the first pic and cropped it for a fairly wide aspect ratio.
I hate losing the great color at the top so when I do this for my own shots, I end up processing the picture both ways (normal size with all the sky I can get and short-but-wide for the pano feel).
I've attached the results just to show what else might be possible (working with just what was posted...if you're shooting raw, you can do far more if you're interested)...
well done.
RAW makes it easier to tweak things after the shooting is over, but there's still a fair amount that can be done without it (the tweaks above were done to the non-RAW pic you posted). It's always worth trying.
Looking forward to more of your work