Yesterday I was reviewing my slides from St. Paul Island in the Pribilofs and I decided to work on this photograph of a tufted puffin. I cropped into the head, selected the background, cloned out black areas that were encroaching the front of the bird, and darken the background utilizing multiply at about 80% opacity. I did selective sharpening on the head of the bird and increase saturation. I utilized Photoshop and Lightroom.
Taken with Nikon D 300 S, 300 mm lens, ISO 400, 1/200, F8
11-04-2010, 08:32 AM
Geoff Warnock
An impressive species Myer and the detail has held well in both blacks and whites. I find the saturation a bit too high personally, and depending on taste, I might consider running the equivalent of noise reduction on the background.
11-04-2010, 09:44 AM
Myer Bornstein
Thanks Geoff for your comments
I had increased the saturation because lately when I post the images are coming out dull.
11-04-2010, 09:53 AM
Geoff Warnock
You're welcome Myer, I also wondered whether the saturation was related to the image being scanned from a slide.
11-04-2010, 01:08 PM
Doug Brown
Just love this species Myer! Nice detail, but I agree that the saturation could be pulled back a little. Wish for a slight head turn towards the viewer. I see some graininess in the blacks of the bird.
11-04-2010, 08:14 PM
Arthur Morris
Is the D-300 S a Digital camera or a film camera ? :confused:
Myer, is this indeed from a scanned slide?
11-04-2010, 08:25 PM
Randy Stout
Artie:
The D300S is digital, the update of the D300.
Randy
11-04-2010, 08:33 PM
Arthur Morris
Thus the "slide" confusion above :)
11-05-2010, 06:38 AM
Geoff Warnock
indeed, I read 'slide' but never thought twice about the camera in the specs...
11-05-2010, 07:03 AM
Myer Bornstein
Artie
This is the camera I was using at Nickerson. Although you a a canon man you have to at least know what the nikon bodies are :D
11-05-2010, 07:07 AM
Arthur Morris
I was pretty sure that it was a digital camera. You though everyone off by talking about reviewing your "slides." See Geoff's comment in Pane #4.