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#1
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Savageduck insisted
Okay, I was forced to post some air show photos:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/489821...7654121813454/ Comments are welcome, but on the processing, of course. They're just planes in the sky, not much you can do with those as far as composition goes. Anyway, all work was done in LR, all photos were cropped, and all had at least some of the following adjustments: color temp, exposure, shadows, highlights, clarity, vibrance, saturation, and sharpening, and one photo used the haze removal slider (the one with the sun in the upper right corner). Those are the things I'm interested in comments on. I see after posting them that there is noise in the sky in some of them. I really need to look into that, but it might just be aggressive sharpening. I also failed to remove spots in a couple of the photos. I do need to learn to clean those lenses... |
#2
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Savageduck insisted
On 2015-07-28 07:25:49 +0000, Bill W said:
Okay, I was forced to post some air show photos: ;-) https://www.flickr.com/photos/489821...7654121813454/ Comments are welcome, but on the processing, of course. They're just planes in the sky, not much you can do with those as far as composition goes. Don't worry about that. It looks as though you were positioned near the end of the runway where all the planes were on final approach. You had some interesting captures. The shots of the "Buffs" B-52s reminded me of the days in the 60's and 70s, when at about 3 PM-4:30 PM everyday, there was an endless stream of B-52s overhead on the approach to Griffiss AFB returning from their SAC mission, Anyway, all work was done in LR, all photos were cropped, and all had at least some of the following adjustments: color temp, exposure, shadows, highlights, clarity, vibrance, saturation, and sharpening, and one photo used the haze removal slider (the one with the sun in the upper right corner). Those are the things I'm interested in comments on. I see after posting them that there is noise in the sky in some of them. I really need to look into that, but it might just be aggressive sharpening. I also failed to remove spots in a couple of the photos. I do need to learn to clean those lenses... There are some shots which have great potential; The F-16, The F-18, the F-86 (that has some highlight clipping which needs fixing), and The F-22. I am not clear on the ID of one of the older fighters, but I think it is either an F-80, or an F-94. Also the B-52 & B-1B are impressive, but need some dust spot clean up. The P-51 shot was spoilt by the sun flare. On to LR Post. Are these RAW or JPEG originals? Spots (dust spots anyway) are more likely to be on the sensor than the lens. It is worth learning how to clean the sensor if you are using a DSLR or a mirrorless system. Most of those can be addressed in post. Since you are using LR for post remember that all adjustments are non-destructive and reversable and can always be revisited and tweaked. Obviously, you are using a workflow you are comfortable with but here is a little input from me . In LR my RAW workflow goes something like this: 1: Set "Camera Calibration". 2: Check "Lens Correction" which includes correcting CA, zoomed in to 1:1 on contrast edges/fringes. 3: "Basic" panel: a: Set Black Point, with the cursor on the "Blacks" slider, hold down the alt/Option key, then adjust until you have one or two areas of black spots on the white background. b: Set White point, repeat the procedure above. c: Check highlights the same way sliding to the left until hot spots dissapear and clipping is dealt with. For the following the alt/Option key technique isn't used. d: Clarity, adjust for taste but don't over do. e: Shadows, sliding to right is going to open up some of the shadow detail without adjusting exposure. f: Exposure, tweak if needed. g: Contrast, Tweak if needed. h: WB (Temp, & Tint), Tweak if needed. 4: "Detail" a: Sharpening, again use the alt/Option key while moving the slider to the right to between 60-115. Then do the same with Radius, setting from 1.0-1.5. Finally with Masking hold down the alt/Option key and slide to the right, usually to 80-95 so that only the area needing sharpening is sharpened. b: Noise, pick an area of sky and zoom in to 1:1, hold down the alt/Option key and the image will apear grey. If you see any noise move the luminance slider to the right usually somewhere between 25-40. FINALLY crop to finish. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#3
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Savageduck insisted
On 28/07/2015 13:41, Savageduck wrote:
On 2015-07-28 07:25:49 +0000, Bill W said: snip Spots (dust spots anyway) are more likely to be on the sensor than the lens. It is worth learning how to clean the sensor if you are using a DSLR or a mirrorless system. snip Please excuse the hijack - any top tips? My Canon 40D has some now irritating spots of muck somewhere - the sensor I think. -- Cheers, Rob |
#4
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Savageduck insisted
In article , RJH wrote:
Spots (dust spots anyway) are more likely to be on the sensor than the lens. It is worth learning how to clean the sensor if you are using a DSLR or a mirrorless system. Please excuse the hijack - any top tips? My Canon 40D has some now irritating spots of muck somewhere - the sensor I think. start with a rocket blower: http://www.giottosusa.com/rocket-blasters that should clear all but the most stubborn dust. |
#5
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Savageduck insisted
On Tue, 28 Jul 2015 05:41:45 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On 2015-07-28 07:25:49 +0000, Bill W said: Okay, I was forced to post some air show photos: ;-) https://www.flickr.com/photos/489821...7654121813454/ Comments are welcome, but on the processing, of course. They're just planes in the sky, not much you can do with those as far as composition goes. Don't worry about that. It looks as though you were positioned near the end of the runway where all the planes were on final approach. You had some interesting captures. Yes, right outside the base. The shots of the "Buffs" B-52s reminded me of the days in the 60's and 70s, when at about 3 PM-4:30 PM everyday, there was an endless stream of B-52s overhead on the approach to Griffiss AFB returning from their SAC mission, Anyway, all work was done in LR, all photos were cropped, and all had at least some of the following adjustments: color temp, exposure, shadows, highlights, clarity, vibrance, saturation, and sharpening, and one photo used the haze removal slider (the one with the sun in the upper right corner). Those are the things I'm interested in comments on. I see after posting them that there is noise in the sky in some of them. I really need to look into that, but it might just be aggressive sharpening. I also failed to remove spots in a couple of the photos. I do need to learn to clean those lenses... There are some shots which have great potential; The F-16, The F-18, the F-86 (that has some highlight clipping which needs fixing), and The F-22. I am not clear on the ID of one of the older fighters, but I think it is either an F-80, or an F-94. Also the B-52 & B-1B are impressive, but need some dust spot clean up. I did overlook various spots in some photos. You say some shots have potential, but did any of them look okay as finished photos? My opinion was that a couple of them did, but others were just sloppy work. The P-51 shot was spoilt by the sun flare. That's the one I used the dehazing slider on. It actually worked wonders (it was a borderline delete photo), and I sort of like the effect. Have you tried it on any photos yet? I though it gave this photo a sort of artsy look. On to LR Post. Are these RAW or JPEG originals? Raw. I never touch the jpegs anymore. I'll probably just go to raw only in the camera settings. Spots (dust spots anyway) are more likely to be on the sensor than the lens. It is worth learning how to clean the sensor if you are using a DSLR or a mirrorless system. There were spots on the lens, but I did notice that there might be other problems. Unfortunately, it looked more like pixel size, which worries me. Most of those can be addressed in post. Where I bothered, they came out easily. Since you are using LR for post remember that all adjustments are non-destructive and reversable and can always be revisited and tweaked. Obviously, you are using a workflow you are comfortable with but here is a little input from me . In LR my RAW workflow goes something like this: 1: Set "Camera Calibration". 2: Check "Lens Correction" which includes correcting CA, zoomed in to 1:1 on contrast edges/fringes. 3: "Basic" panel: a: Set Black Point, with the cursor on the "Blacks" slider, hold down the alt/Option key, then adjust until you have one or two areas of black spots on the white background. b: Set White point, repeat the procedure above. c: Check highlights the same way sliding to the left until hot spots dissapear and clipping is dealt with. For the following the alt/Option key technique isn't used. d: Clarity, adjust for taste but don't over do. e: Shadows, sliding to right is going to open up some of the shadow detail without adjusting exposure. f: Exposure, tweak if needed. g: Contrast, Tweak if needed. h: WB (Temp, & Tint), Tweak if needed. 4: "Detail" a: Sharpening, again use the alt/Option key while moving the slider to the right to between 60-115. Then do the same with Radius, setting from 1.0-1.5. Finally with Masking hold down the alt/Option key and slide to the right, usually to 80-95 so that only the area needing sharpening is sharpened. b: Noise, pick an area of sky and zoom in to 1:1, hold down the alt/Option key and the image will apear grey. If you see any noise move the luminance slider to the right usually somewhere between 25-40. FINALLY crop to finish. I'll give all this a try - there's a few things in there that I wasn't even aware of - maybe doing some over again. I also think that some of them ended up looking a bit HDR-ish, and I think it's because I overdid the shadow adjustment. And why do you crop only at the end? |
#6
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Savageduck insisted
On 2015-07-28 17:25:11 +0000, RJH said:
On 28/07/2015 13:41, Savageduck wrote: On 2015-07-28 07:25:49 +0000, Bill W said: snip Spots (dust spots anyway) are more likely to be on the sensor than the lens. It is worth learning how to clean the sensor if you are using a DSLR or a mirrorless system. snip Please excuse the hijack - any top tips? My Canon 40D has some now irritating spots of muck somewhere - the sensor I think. Usually a blower such as a Giottos Rocket will move light dust. DO NOT USE CANNED AIR! The propellant will cause more problems than the dust. However, there is going to come a time when only a wet cleaning is going to remove persistant dust. Dust is going to be located in a position opposite to where you see it on your image. Dust spots in the upper left of your image will be on the bottom right of the sensor. The first thing to remember with wet cleaning and using PEC pad and/or swabs is not to economize. Only make a single wipe and don't reuse the swab, or all you will be doing is moving the contamination on the sensor. I have a few tools I use: Eclipse Optic Cleaning fluid Pre-moisened (with eclipse fluid) Swabs (buy the correct size for your sensor). Not necessary, but very helpful is some sort of luminated magifying viewer for checking the sensor. I use Photographic Solutions cleaning supplies. Their kits are useful and worth considering. http://photosol.com They do not sell direct so I use Micro-Tools. http://www.micro-tools.com/store/~/C-6/Digital-Camera-Cleaning-Supplies.aspx or 2filter.com http://www.2filter.com/shopsite_sc/store/html/Cleaning_Supplies.html Then to get a good idea of how to go about things this has always been a good site for reference. http://www.cleaningdigitalcameras.com I did all my sensor cleaning boot camp with my D70 which was a real dust magnet. I was thankful when the camera manufacturers implemented sensor cleaning. Now my cmeras are set to clean the sensor at power up. I use the Giottos blower around the camera/lens flange if I have shot in dusty conditions. I also use a small chamber brush and the Giottos inside the chamber without having the mirrior up to expose the sensor. Then If I have to change lenses in windy conditions I protect the change as much as I can. You can do this by trying to get indoors out of the wind, or finding some lee shelter, at worse turn your back to the wind to provide some sort of lee. For times wind is unavoidable having a change bag available is a good idea. An old pillow case makes a great change bag. Following all of that I find that the need to do a wet clean has been minimized and I find myself wet cleaning once every 8-18 months these days. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#7
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Savageduck insisted
On 2015-07-28 18:29:55 +0000, Bill W said:
On Tue, 28 Jul 2015 05:41:45 -0700, Savageduck wrote: On 2015-07-28 07:25:49 +0000, Bill W said: Okay, I was forced to post some air show photos: ;-) https://www.flickr.com/photos/489821...7654121813454/ Comments are welcome, but on the processing, of course. They're just planes in the sky, not much you can do with those as far as composition goes. Don't worry about that. It looks as though you were positioned near the end of the runway where all the planes were on final approach. You had some interesting captures. Yes, right outside the base. The shots of the "Buffs" B-52s reminded me of the days in the 60's and 70s, when at about 3 PM-4:30 PM everyday, there was an endless stream of B-52s overhead on the approach to Griffiss AFB returning from their SAC mission, Anyway, all work was done in LR, all photos were cropped, and all had at least some of the following adjustments: color temp, exposure, shadows, highlights, clarity, vibrance, saturation, and sharpening, and one photo used the haze removal slider (the one with the sun in the upper right corner). Those are the things I'm interested in comments on. I see after posting them that there is noise in the sky in some of them. I really need to look into that, but it might just be aggressive sharpening. I also failed to remove spots in a couple of the photos. I do need to learn to clean those lenses... There are some shots which have great potential; The F-16, The F-18, the F-86 (that has some highlight clipping which needs fixing), and The F-22. I am not clear on the ID of one of the older fighters, but I think it is either an F-80, or an F-94. Also the B-52 & B-1B are impressive, but need some dust spot clean up. I did overlook various spots in some photos. You say some shots have potential, but did any of them look okay as finished photos? My opinion was that a couple of them did, but others were just sloppy work. Certainly there were quite a few which were fine as presented. The deciding factor is your intent for presentation. Those would be fine for online viewing via Flickr, but might need a whole bunch of adjustment and cleaning up for print. Here I was thinking particularly of the F-86, the F-18, and F-22 shots. The P-51 shot was spoilt by the sun flare. That's the one I used the dehazing slider on. It actually worked wonders (it was a borderline delete photo), and I sort of like the effect. Have you tried it on any photos yet? I though it gave this photo a sort of artsy look. I ahve tried it on a few landscapes with atmospheric haze. However, I was not particularly happy with the results as the changes to contrast were not particularlylocalized, but total. That seems to deepen saturation and I don't like that after having made adjustments in the Basic panel. On to LR Post. Are these RAW or JPEG originals? Raw. I never touch the jpegs anymore. I'll probably just go to raw only in the camera settings. Great! Spots (dust spots anyway) are more likely to be on the sensor than the lens. It is worth learning how to clean the sensor if you are using a DSLR or a mirrorless system. There were spots on the lens, but I did notice that there might be other problems. Unfortunately, it looked more like pixel size, which worries me. Most lens dust is not going to show on the image unless it is plastered on. Sensor dust spots are quite typical and easily recognized once you are familiar with them. This might help. Select the Spot removal tool, then under the workspace you will see "Visualize Spots", check that box and you will see what those pesky spots really look like. Here is what that looks like in a 2005 shot with my D70 (AKA "The Dust Magnet") https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1295663/FileChute/screenshot_235.jpg ....and the cleaned up version. https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1295663/FileChute/screenshot_236.jpg ....and the cropped & cleaned final result, that is the dust battle field where I learned my sensor cleaning https://db.tt/XKRfzt31 Most of those can be addressed in post. Where I bothered, they came out easily. Good. Since you are using LR for post remember that all adjustments are non-destructive and reversable and can always be revisited and tweaked. Obviously, you are using a workflow you are comfortable with but here is a little input from me . In LR my RAW workflow goes something like this: 1: Set "Camera Calibration". 2: Check "Lens Correction" which includes correcting CA, zoomed in to 1:1 on contrast edges/fringes. 3: "Basic" panel: a: Set Black Point, with the cursor on the "Blacks" slider, hold down the alt/Option key, then adjust until you have one or two areas of black spots on the white background. b: Set White point, repeat the procedure above. c: Check highlights the same way sliding to the left until hot spots dissapear and clipping is dealt with. For the following the alt/Option key technique isn't used. d: Clarity, adjust for taste but don't over do. e: Shadows, sliding to right is going to open up some of the shadow detail without adjusting exposure. f: Exposure, tweak if needed. g: Contrast, Tweak if needed. h: WB (Temp, & Tint), Tweak if needed. 4: "Detail" a: Sharpening, again use the alt/Option key while moving the slider to the right to between 60-115. Then do the same with Radius, setting from 1.0-1.5. Finally with Masking hold down the alt/Option key and slide to the right, usually to 80-95 so that only the area needing sharpening is sharpened. b: Noise, pick an area of sky and zoom in to 1:1, hold down the alt/Option key and the image will apear grey. If you see any noise move the luminance slider to the right usually somewhere between 25-40. FINALLY crop to finish. I'll give all this a try - there's a few things in there that I wasn't even aware of - maybe doing some over again. I also think that some of them ended up looking a bit HDR-ish, and I think it's because I overdid the shadow adjustment. And why do you crop only at the end? Just habit. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#8
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Savageduck insisted
On 7/28/2015 3:25 AM, Bill W wrote:
Okay, I was forced to post some air show photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/489821...7654121813454/ Comments are welcome, but on the processing, of course. They're just planes in the sky, not much you can do with those as far as composition goes. Anyway, all work was done in LR, all photos were cropped, and all had at least some of the following adjustments: color temp, exposure, shadows, highlights, clarity, vibrance, saturation, and sharpening, and one photo used the haze removal slider (the one with the sun in the upper right corner). Those are the things I'm interested in comments on. I see after posting them that there is noise in the sky in some of them. I really need to look into that, but it might just be aggressive sharpening. I also failed to remove spots in a couple of the photos. I do need to learn to clean those lenses... What look are you trying to achieve. Try playing with levels /curves on a separate layer. Judicious use will cause your image to really pop. http://www.picturecorrect.com/tips/when-to-use-levels-or-curves-in-photoshop/ There are also some neat free tutorials on youtube. -- PeterN |
#9
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Savageduck insisted
On 2015-07-28 23:29:35 +0000, PeterN said:
On 7/28/2015 3:25 AM, Bill W wrote: Okay, I was forced to post some air show photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/489821...7654121813454/ Comments are welcome, but on the processing, of course. They're just planes in the sky, not much you can do with those as far as composition goes. Anyway, all work was done in LR, all photos were cropped, and all had at least some of the following adjustments: color temp, exposure, shadows, highlights, clarity, vibrance, saturation, and sharpening, and one photo used the haze removal slider (the one with the sun in the upper right corner). Those are the things I'm interested in comments on. I see after posting them that there is noise in the sky in some of them. I really need to look into that, but it might just be aggressive sharpening. I also failed to remove spots in a couple of the photos. I do need to learn to clean those lenses... What look are you trying to achieve. Try playing with levels /curves on a separate layer. Judicious use will cause your image to really pop. http://www.picturecorrect.com/tips/when-to-use-levels-or-curves-in-photoshop/ There are also some neat free tutorials on youtube. You might have noticed that Bill is doing all his post in Lightroom. While you have a tone curve adjustment panel in LR it does not provide the same level of flexibility as curves and levels in PS. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#10
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Savageduck insisted
On 7/28/2015 7:42 PM, Savageduck wrote:
On 2015-07-28 23:29:35 +0000, PeterN said: On 7/28/2015 3:25 AM, Bill W wrote: Okay, I was forced to post some air show photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/489821...7654121813454/ Comments are welcome, but on the processing, of course. They're just planes in the sky, not much you can do with those as far as composition goes. Anyway, all work was done in LR, all photos were cropped, and all had at least some of the following adjustments: color temp, exposure, shadows, highlights, clarity, vibrance, saturation, and sharpening, and one photo used the haze removal slider (the one with the sun in the upper right corner). Those are the things I'm interested in comments on. I see after posting them that there is noise in the sky in some of them. I really need to look into that, but it might just be aggressive sharpening. I also failed to remove spots in a couple of the photos. I do need to learn to clean those lenses... What look are you trying to achieve. Try playing with levels /curves on a separate layer. Judicious use will cause your image to really pop. http://www.picturecorrect.com/tips/when-to-use-levels-or-curves-in-photoshop/ There are also some neat free tutorials on youtube. You might have noticed that Bill is doing all his post in Lightroom. While you have a tone curve adjustment panel in LR it does not provide the same level of flexibility as curves and levels in PS. Oops -- PeterN |
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