
Originally Posted by
Diane Miller
A very nice setting here, with the bird framed by the branches. Unfortunately, again, no detail in the dark head. If you look at the histogram, the dark values in the head run between 25-30, with nothing darker. To get detail, they should span from close to 0 up to maybe 30-40, depending on what was captured. Go back to the raw conversion and see if you can get more tonal stretching in the darks -- the histogram is the guide. What version of DPP do you use? The latest is v4 and it claims to have better tonal adjustments than v3. Maybe there is some leeway in DPP to manipulate the tone curve. I don't think it can come close to LR/ACR but worth a try. See the curve move I showed in Warren's Tree Swallows, just previous to this post.
My thinking on this subject (easy to say after the fact, of course) would have been to go vertical from the start in order to get the reflection. If there wasn't a focus sensor where you needed it, shoot in AI Servo, get a sensor on the head, hold the shutter halfway down to hold focus, and quickly aim the camera slightly down to recompose and shoot. Or you could have done the same focus and recompose in landscape orientation. May not be as good as having an active sensor on the head at the instant of shooting, but at the distance you were, it should work well if you don't move a lot when you recompose.