Some curvy possibilities (3)
richtersl
Registered Users Posts: 3,322 Major grins
Finally got a chance to get out and take some photos of curvy possibilities. Do any of these work?
Winding Road #1
Winding Road #2
Water Wheel
Winding Road #1
Winding Road #2
Water Wheel
0
Comments
All are very nice shots!
Unfortunately, the first two are not curvy enough, and the third one says "round", not "curvy"
HTH
Though #2 isn't as interesting as #1, I like how the curvy road was shadowed in the foreground and lighter in the b/g, which drew me right in to follow it.
You're way ahead of me, I better get rollin'.
Tessa
www.tessa-hd.smugmug.com
www.printandportfolio.com
This summer's wilderness photography project: www.tessa-hd.smugmug.com/gallery/3172341
Thanks for pointing out the purple fringing, Tessa! If I remember correctly, removing that just involves desaturating the magentas using a Hue/Saturation Layer, right?
http://lrichters.smugmug.com
Nik,
A seeming digression - how do I successfully upload 3 mods of Linda's LPS6 in the same reply? Can it be done without cluttering up my own galleries?
A simple attachment from my HD limits me to 1...
TIA
[FONT="]As You Think, So Shall You BE... Rumi, 13th Century Persian Poet
Award-Winning Photography, Workshop Instructor, Storyteller, Writer
[/FONT][FONT="]Blog: [/FONT][FONT="]Pathways of Light[/FONT]
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Tessa
www.tessa-hd.smugmug.com
www.printandportfolio.com
This summer's wilderness photography project: www.tessa-hd.smugmug.com/gallery/3172341
Few options:
- Use 3 consecutive replies with 1 attachment in each
- Upload them to an otherwise hidden gallery (that's what I do most of the time) and link as many as you want in one post.
HTHOK, looks like the 2nd is simpler...
Thanks Nik, is there a Russian saying similar to 'You da man?'
[FONT="]As You Think, So Shall You BE... Rumi, 13th Century Persian Poet
Award-Winning Photography, Workshop Instructor, Storyteller, Writer
[/FONT][FONT="]Blog: [/FONT][FONT="]Pathways of Light[/FONT]
[FONT="] Workshops: Creating Fine Art Magic[/FONT][FONT="]
Book: Paths of Light [/FONT]
[FONT="]Workshops: 2011 Lightroom 3 Workshops
[/FONT][FONT="]Galleries, Bisti Art
[/FONT]
Forgive me for the repetition, but I wanted the images to show...
Linda,
With ancestors from North Georgia, I have ancient memories of tree covered forest roads, point bridges, and in gorgeous green landscapes I don't generally have access to now. You're images evoke a response and I thought perhaps if I played with them, other fond memories might flood back as well.
Your first image has a couple of elements which lose control of my eye. So, I decided on a little bit with cropping, then just the merest amount of blending and saturation… I wanted to bring out the red underneath the trees and slightly desaturate the green.
The result is shown below; it suggests a vertical pose for that S-curve would certainly accentuate the subtle nature of that curve.
I would be remiss if I didn't mention the unsharp foreground is a distraction...
I had little trouble with the second image other than the ground to the left of the big tree was pulling my eye away. After I cut it out and slightly screened (lightened) the tree, so it wasn't such a massive black splurch, here's the result.
Water wheels, the pulse of Colonial life...
From the very beginning, the soft, shadowed wall leading into the axis of the waterwheel was distracting. If I remove that wall, then I can pop the waterwheel and it's subtle, yet intriguing reflection in the window pane. Then, if I blend down the spokes, and slightly darken (multiply) behind the waterwheel, when I saturate red slightly, the waterwheel comes out in an elegant fashion.
All told, photo shopping took about 15 minutes- words took longer.
Linda, I hope you don't feel I'm presumptive. I just found intrigue and some satisfaction from playing with old memories and new ideas!
[FONT="]As You Think, So Shall You BE... Rumi, 13th Century Persian Poet
Award-Winning Photography, Workshop Instructor, Storyteller, Writer
[/FONT][FONT="]Blog: [/FONT][FONT="]Pathways of Light[/FONT]
[FONT="] Workshops: Creating Fine Art Magic[/FONT][FONT="]
Book: Paths of Light [/FONT]
[FONT="]Workshops: 2011 Lightroom 3 Workshops
[/FONT][FONT="]Galleries, Bisti Art
[/FONT]
Joe,
Thank you! :sweet You didn't need to go through all that trouble. It's amazing what a difference a crop makes. :wow
I originally went to the mill to take a shot of the water wheel for this LPS. Then, as long as I was there, I thought I'd take some shots of the roads nearby. I have shots of that water wheel from several angles. Your suggestions did give more life to that wheel and I thank you for that. I hemmed and hawed about cropping the stone fence on the right of it. In the end I decided to leave it in rather than obsess over it.
I added a Gaussian blur to #1 in post processing, which is probably why the foreground looked unsharp to you. I should have made the blur heavier, perhaps, or just not used it.
#2 was a wildcard. I wasn't sure about it but I thought I'd keep it on hand as a possibility. Looking at it again today, I should probably eliminate it.
That location is only about 3 miles from my house and I think I should be able to convince my husband to come with me for a walk there this week and to bring the dog. This way, as per LiquidAir's suggestion, I'd have a point of interest along the road.
Good thing I have another week to go!
http://lrichters.smugmug.com
Linda,
When Marc Muench started his artist-in-residence position, somebody put a photo up and he did roughly the same thing, a hasty implementation of some short Photoshop steps and that photo really snapped. He gave me some insight and it improved my perceptions and PS workflow.
And like I said, it was no trouble because there were so many memories that juiced up because you put those shots up.
Yep, I think the blur may have overdone it on the first shot because when I was done, using the vertical format, that was the only rub. So why not leave the blur out?
And yes, it's always a good thing to have another week to go...
Keep up the good work!
BTW, where were the shots taken?
... hey Nik, how do I get those shots to appear on screen?
[FONT="]As You Think, So Shall You BE... Rumi, 13th Century Persian Poet
Award-Winning Photography, Workshop Instructor, Storyteller, Writer
[/FONT][FONT="]Blog: [/FONT][FONT="]Pathways of Light[/FONT]
[FONT="] Workshops: Creating Fine Art Magic[/FONT][FONT="]
Book: Paths of Light [/FONT]
[FONT="]Workshops: 2011 Lightroom 3 Workshops
[/FONT][FONT="]Galleries, Bisti Art
[/FONT]
They were taken at a place called Cuttalossa Farm here in eastern Pennsylvania. It's located on Cuttalossa Road, stangely enough.
The place has an absolutely magical quality to it and is frequently visited by photographers and artists. Sadly, parts of it were recently damaged by a flood. :cry The farm is located in a valley and the creek that runs through it overflowed its banks thanks to poor storm water drainage from homes that were recently built in the hills above it.
http://lrichters.smugmug.com
The easiest way that I use is to right click on the photo and select "properties" in SM. Double click and copy the URL you see there - it'll have a .JPG extension (most likely).
Then come back over here and create a new post - click on the yellow botton in the tool bar with the mountain and sun - and paste the URL there. You can then add as many photos as you'd like (within reason, of course!).
For more info, click here: http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=117
HTH!
Nice redos!
www.tippiepics.com
Thanks for the comment on the redos - unfortunately Sunday seems to be dense day...
I would appreciate some more help... I would like the images to appear in the revised version by simply editing the reply, then submitting, but do not appear to know how to get that simple task done.
[FONT="]As You Think, So Shall You BE... Rumi, 13th Century Persian Poet
Award-Winning Photography, Workshop Instructor, Storyteller, Writer
[/FONT][FONT="]Blog: [/FONT][FONT="]Pathways of Light[/FONT]
[FONT="] Workshops: Creating Fine Art Magic[/FONT][FONT="]
Book: Paths of Light [/FONT]
[FONT="]Workshops: 2011 Lightroom 3 Workshops
[/FONT][FONT="]Galleries, Bisti Art
[/FONT]
Hey Joe,
All you have to do edit the reply, place the cursor where you want to insert the picture, click the Insert Image icon, paste or type the image URL in the prompt, and then click OK. I'm kind of glad you didn't have this figured out yet because I wanted to redo those photos on my own without having the wonderful "re-dos" you did as a reference. I removed the blur and tried a difference crop on the one. And, I used a different photo for the water wheel.
As soon as the weather clears up -- it's been raining all weekend -- I'll be able to head out again for a re-shoot.
#1 - Different crop, removed Gaussian blur, saturated reds and yellows
#2 - Different photo, different angle. Dodged window area behind wheel to bring out shadows, saturated reds and yellows.
http://lrichters.smugmug.com
www.tippiepics.com
I *love* #1
And I have to thank Joe again for helping me see the details better.
Strange, I keep seeing the partial water wheel as an arc or curve --a complete or even 3/4 of a wheel would be round to me. But, if others interpreting it as round, the judges may also interpret it that way. This is why soliciting comments is a good thing!
Once this rainy weather breaks I think I'm still going to try a reshoot, though. It's Monday and it's still raining. I'm off all week from work, too. Figures!
http://lrichters.smugmug.com
I think that th problem with #3 is that people know what it is and think "Oh that's a nice water wheel" (then subconsciously they go "wheels are round not curvey":D)
From what I can see, it looks like you have some amazing places to photograph. Have a great week shooting.
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