Tracy re-visited
I decided to try my hand at this a second time, I tryed to use some PP effects I usually don't attempt such as selective color... anyways.. let me know what you think
I have some pretty tough skin so, this is all about improving!!




0
Comments
I am getting a feeling that you resort to somewhat extreme post effects as a mean to salvage the image.
Tracy is a pretty girl, but the posing on the #1 looks incomplete/awkward (as if caught mid-move) and the angling on the #2 is non-flattering (that big black blob of the knee-high boots hurts the image like nothing else).
You have at least two ligths and a willing model, I'm sure you can better than that...
Start with the idea, develop a pose, define the angle, support it by lighting - and you'll get a winning image! Postprocessing, while intrinsic to the whole process, is the last step...
HTH