Daughter at play

CarloskbcoCarloskbco Registered Users Posts: 32 Big grins
edited November 8, 2007 in People
She loves to set up her "playing" area in the kitchen, where she seems to spend most of her time talking and keeping company to her Mom. She did not mind a couple of pics, using the homemade reflector....
E300 70mm ISO200 f2.8 1/100

217201151-M.jpg

217210931-M.jpg

Comments are welcome

:D

Carlos

Comments

  • candersoncanderson Registered Users Posts: 71 Big grins
    edited November 5, 2007
    I Like the first one best......
    Chris Anderson
    Canon EOS 20D
    http://www.lazycreekphoto.com

    Teddy Roosevelt Revised: "Walk softly and carry a big lens."
  • kitvankitvan Registered Users Posts: 243 Major grins
    edited November 5, 2007
    nice shots!
    ...do you do any post processing on your shots? etc...
    "Time is an illusion. Lunchtime, doubly so."
  • CarloskbcoCarloskbco Registered Users Posts: 32 Big grins
    edited November 5, 2007
    Kitvan...
    kitvan wrote:
    nice shots!
    ...do you do any post processing on your shots? etc...

    Yes, I shoot RAW and process my shots with Photoshop CS3, which I'm still learning how to use, after reading your comments earlier, I went back to the second file and processed it with this results...





    217973713-M.jpg

    Hope this looks better, part of the problem is the location of the homemade reflector, too close to her...

    :D

    Thanks for looking and for your comments

    Carlos
  • kitvankitvan Registered Users Posts: 243 Major grins
    edited November 8, 2007
    I'd try just applying +5-10 Contrast, +0-5 Brightness, and +5 Highlight Control (in Shadow/Highlight in Image Menu). This may eliminate some of the washy look.

    The color balance on your second version seems a little funny...headscratch.gif
    "Time is an illusion. Lunchtime, doubly so."
  • CarloskbcoCarloskbco Registered Users Posts: 32 Big grins
    edited November 8, 2007
    Yep...it is weird looking...:-)
    kitvan wrote:
    I'd try just applying +5-10 Contrast, +0-5 Brightness, and +5 Highlight Control (in Shadow/Highlight in Image Menu). This may eliminate some of the washy look.

    The color balance on your second version seems a little funny...headscratch.gif

    I'll try your settings...

    Thanks for looking andyour comments

    Carlos
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