Paperwhites again...help?
Hello all--
Here is another shot-- this one seems too dark to me but the other photo I posted people have said the flowers are over exposed. Which do you prefer? High exp, medium, or low?
Overxposed?
Medium?
Low?
What are your thoughts?
All shots were taken while firing my 580EX canon flash that I read about here-- I love it!
Ryan:wink
Here is another shot-- this one seems too dark to me but the other photo I posted people have said the flowers are over exposed. Which do you prefer? High exp, medium, or low?
Overxposed?
Medium?
Low?
What are your thoughts?
All shots were taken while firing my 580EX canon flash that I read about here-- I love it!
Ryan:wink
0
Comments
I think that last one is pretty on my monitor.
ginger
http://ryans.smugmug.com/
I love the lovely detail in the last shot of the petals, but I like the green in the one above it. In the "dead of winter" seeing "spring" green seems the whole point of growing paperwhites.
I'd suggest two photos taken on a tripod and blending them in Photoshop or some other editing software program so you can see the spring green, and yet maintain the detail in the white petals.
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The one's which you have toned down/darked a bit do look a little better on screen. Of course there's another but : and it's that the flowers facing the camera had less light and so do look a bit dark.
They're all good though. Howard
last one is the best. but like ginger said, i really like the greens in #2. so because the composition is so close. maybe you could layer them? keep the stalks of #2 and the flowers of #3
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http://ryans.smugmug.com/
The flowers in the second one are overexposed to me
The composition of the last one looks better to me.
Some things you could try:
- Shoot Raw and expose for the flowers. Then use layers in photoshop to brighten the background
- Use a tripod and expose for the flowers in the first shot, then shoot for the background. Combine the shots in Photoshop
Have funMy Photo gallery- rohirrim.smugmug.com
Selective Sharpening Tutorial
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