The path through the trees
Khaos
Registered Users Posts: 2,435 Major grins
If you can't find anything to shoot, break out the wide angle, find some "perspective."
At a different angle and exagerating the curve of the tree. I also played with the color to give it a colder more desolate look.
At a different angle and exagerating the curve of the tree. I also played with the color to give it a colder more desolate look.
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Very good way to handle nothing to shot
By the way there's probably a couple macro shots in there somewhere :lol
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I like both shots, I am looking to buy a wide angle lens in a couple more weeks time seriously looking at the Canon 24mm 1.4
Thanks for sharing your images......... Skippy (Australia)
Skippy (Australia) - Moderator of "HOLY MACRO" and "OTHER COOL SHOTS"
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:skippy Everyone has the right to be stupid, but some people just abuse the privilege :dgrin
They were taken using the 10-22 EF-S. If you have the 20D, I highly recommend this lens.
While I liked the idea of the shot, the sky color that day was blah, and the overall effect of two tall trees with some branches against the sky didn't do it for me. So I deepened the sky and increased the contrast against the branches and also sharpened the bark of the trees to get the effect of the trees pushing upwards against a sky pushing downwards.
Could you tell me how that sharpens them? Not technically, but what I should do when I use shadow/highlights so that I don't get a hyper sharpening effect. I use it for shadow highlights, rarely use USM, as I hate people saying my stuff is over sharpened. I figured that if I didn't sharpen, they wouldn't say that. But I often do what you did, not for the same effect, but I just like the highlights/shadow thing, and I like to deepen the blacks and often like to bring up the whites a little? How would I avoid a sharpening look?
I have already said that I really like the second trees. I would love to have that lens. I have the 17-40L from fish. I think he sold it so he could buy the lens you used. I have to have some lens I can half way call "normal". My 17-40 seems to have become it.
ginger
I purposely overdid it on these photos, but it is a tool I use way more than unsharp mask. My pics are in focus, but sometimes need a little help bring out some textures.
Without meaning to highjack this thread, let me get a plug in for my sharpening tutorial. and the current digital darkroom assignment on sharpening. Sharpening is not a fix for soft focus. In fact, it doesn't work very well if the image is not in focus. But nearly every image can benefit from some sharpening, especially when printed.