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Bill Dix
11-01-2010, 09:42 AM
I shot this in poor light as a silhouette, but when I got it home I didn't much like the result. So before trashing it I decided to experiment a bit. Added + 3.3 stops in RAW transfer, and applied a Watercolor filter in an attempt to make the troublesome noise into an artistic texture. Let me know what you think.

D90 | 80-400 @ 370mm | ISO 640 | 1/2500s @ f/7.1 | -0.7 EV as shot, added + 3.3 | HH

Melissa Groo
11-01-2010, 10:52 AM
I think that's absolutely beautiful, Bill! Nice save!

Julie Kenward
11-01-2010, 12:35 PM
That is a nice save, Bill! Might consider darkening the bright end of the perch but everything else is terrific. I'm going to copy this down to the OOTB forum so they can see it as well.

Rob Miner
11-01-2010, 01:09 PM
Hey Bill,

You give me hope. Great picture - planned or not.

Rob...............

Gus Hallgren
11-01-2010, 01:50 PM
Hi Bill;

Like your save, looks great. If mine, I would remove vertical piece of perch.

Well done, Young Man, you created a masterpiece.

Gus

Brian Kent
11-02-2010, 09:39 PM
Beautiful save Bill! If you don't mind my asking, what did you use for your Watercolor filter, i.e. what product?
Thanks!
Brian

Bill Dix
11-03-2010, 08:17 AM
Thank you all for the comments. Jules, I did darken the bright end of the perch, and the bright spot on the leg, and it looks better. (In my master file I have also selected a white point to fix the blue tint in the image as posted.) Brian, the Watercolor filter is one of 15 options in the Artistic Filter palette in PS Elements (Filter/Artistic/Watercolor). You really need to blow the TIFF image up to full size (11 x 17) to see the full watercolor effect, which is not totally apparent in the web-sized jpeg.