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Thread: Agawa River Sunrise #2

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    Landscapes Moderator Andrew McLachlan's Avatar
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    Default Agawa River Sunrise #2

    Here is another take on the previously posted sunrise over the Agawa River in Ontario's Lake Superior Provincial Park.

    Nikon D800
    Nikon 24-85mm lens @ 72mm
    ISO 100
    f16 @ 0.8 sec
    Mirror-up
    Singh Ray 2-stop Graduated Neutral Density Filter

    Look forward to comments.

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    Andrew
    Interesting composition and color.
    I suspect you masked the foreground and darkened the sky?
    To my eye it appears there are bright highlights peeking through the trees. At first I thought perhaps sharpening artifacts, but they were not consistent -- so I think that it might be that the masking wasn't refined in those areas, or that somehow the sky is a lot brighter through the openings in the trees. Or are these some weird artifact of shrinking to the little tiny JPG or the posting software on this site???
    your thoughts?
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    Last edited by Don Nelson; 09-23-2013 at 11:10 PM.

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    Another tip off on the sky darkening -- almost always the water reflection is a stop or 1.5 stop darker than the sky,.....

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    Hi Andrew, Tell Don there were firefly's behind the trees..

    I prefer this comp over the previous, I think its because of the larger section of river bed in the foreground. I also like that you have captured the mist lifting and that there is a hint of detail in the trees.... Beautiful spot, I can see myself fly fishing there (i wish).

    DON

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    Lifetime Member gail bisson's Avatar
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    I am no expert in landscapes but I can certainly tell you what I like!This is a very dramatic and powerful image.
    Very dramatic colors and I like the lines created by the rocks in the foreground.
    I find it neat that the patterns in the rocks mimic the pattern in the clouds.
    I wish I could see a bit more detail in the trees on the left.
    What is a neutral density filter? What does it do?
    Why not do bracketed exposures and blend the 3 images?
    Thanks for your time in explaining,
    Gail

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    BPN Member dankearl's Avatar
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    I am a fan of amping up colors, but I would probably tone down the sky a bit.
    I alos like this comp better than the first.
    Dan Kearl

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    Landscapes Moderator Andrew McLachlan's Avatar
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    Thanks folks for the comments....much appreciated.

    Dan...the sky was quite intense on this morning...probably the most intense sunrise I have ever seen...will look into toning down slightly.

    Gail...a down and dirty description of a graduated neutral density filter: it is essentially a rectangular piece of resin that is half dark and half clear (the dark will transition/fade to clear) and the darkened section of the filter can be placed over the brightest area of the scene to basically compress the contrast within a scene. Yes I could have captured 3 images and blended them, but the grad filter can, most of the time, capture it in one take which saves me time at the computer...not too mention I am too lazy to blend

    Don...you are absolutely correct that the water reflections are always darker than the sky...thanks for noticing this as I missed it...in hindsight I perhaps should have used my 1-stop grad instead. I will darken up the water a little bit. As for the brighter areas you are seeing I have no clue...the RAW file and optimized version do not have them.

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    BPN Member Morkel Erasmus's Avatar
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    Andrew, looks like a nice sunrise. Overall the image is a bit "purple/magenta" for me - don't the Singh-Ray filters have known colour cast problems or have I got the rabbit by the tail here?

    I would prefer more detail in the FG and midground (as with your most recent image).

    I see what Don's referring to - if you use luminosity masks it should avoid getting those (if it's an artifact of selective sky adjustment to begin with).
    Morkel Erasmus

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