You do not choose your camera for its vaguely defined image quality, you choose it for its handling.
You do not choose your camera for its vaguely defined image quality, you choose it for its handling.
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99% of my #macro #photos are single images because I'm never happy with the results of #FocusStacking. My Focus stacked images look great at first, but then closer inspection reveals halos.
Here's an article on them. Maybe at some point I'll take the time to learn how to deal with them by retouching, but at the moment, it seems like more trouble than its worth.
My #workflow to review and cull photos in #Lightroom:
- Build 1:1 previews to cut load times
- Press F11 to enable 2nd monitor
- Zoom to 100% on monitor 2 and switch to live mode
- View full images on monitor 1 and zoomed image on monitor 2 that follows your mouse so you can check sharpness
- Press caps lock to enable auto advance
- Assign x, u, and p to buttons on a gaming mouse to flag rejections, keepers, and the best shots
- ctrl+backspace to delete the rejects
#PhotographyTip for you: never delete photos on your camera, or at all if possible. You never know when a photo might come out better than you thought. I also use photos with less-than-ideal exposure, focus or subject matter as fodder for experiments with more extreme effects.
Also, #PhotographyTip:
Processing this photo as black and white saved it. It was terrible in color. The strong backlight and everything being in shade washed out the color, so it looked faded.
Those faded colors were great for monochromatic processing, though. I could use them to shift the balance of light and shadow around in a way that felt natural.
Sometimes it's good to look at things from a different perspective.
The same applied to this morning's pigeon photo.
Here's a #Lightroom tip I haven't seen before. I think this one will be helpful to me
TLDR: You can use the luminance slider in the midtone section of the color grading panel to adjust midtones in a more targeted way than you can with the exposure slider.
#photography #PhotographyTalk #PhotographyTip #PostProcessing
With the #photography tag, questions and discussion can get lost amid all the photos being shared. I've made a few posts using the #PhotographyDiscussion tag.
Some other potentially useful tags that came up when I did a hashtag search:
#PhotographyTip
#PhotographyGear
#PhotographyTalk
#PhotographyAdvice
#PhotographyTheory
#PhotographyThoughts
#PhotographyQuestionsβ