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Thread: Turnstone

  1. #1
    Forum Participant Richard Unsworth's Avatar
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    Default Turnstone

    Attached Images Attached Images
     
    Shot at Cleethorpes, Lincs, UK

    This time I was lying in the mud and waiting:)

    All critique welcome


    Sharpening and NR in ACR; Auto levels in CS5


    _MG_7470.CR2
    Camera Model Name
    Canon EOS 40D
    Shooting Date/Time
    9/4/2010 14:17:03
    Tv(Shutter Speed)
    1/2500Sec.
    Av(Aperture Value)
    F5.6
    Metering Modes
    Evaluative metering
    Exposure Compensation
    0
    ISO Speed
    400
    Lens
    EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS USM
    Focal Length
    400.0 mm
    Image size
    3888 x 2592
    Image Quality
    RAW
    Flash
    Off
    White Balance
    Auto
    AF mode
    AI Servo AF
    Picture Style
    Neutral
    Parameters
    Tone Curve : Standard
    Sharpness level : -
    Pattern Sharpness : -
    Contrast : 0
    Sharpness : 3
    Color saturation : -1
    Color tone : 1
    Highlight tone priority : Yes
    Color matrix
    -
    Color Space
    Adobe RGB
    File Size
    10201 KB
    Dust Delete Data
    No
    Drive Mode
    High-speed continuous shooting
    GPS Data
    Satellite signal status : -
    Date(UTC) : -
    Latitude : -
    Longitude : -
    Altitude : -
    Geographic coordinate system : -
    Owner's Name
    Last edited by Richard Unsworth; 09-13-2010 at 07:49 AM. Reason: add info

  2. #2
    Forum Participant
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    Default

    I like the portrait Richard. Beautiful warm mud BG, which you were no doubt covered with by the end of this. Sharpness looks good too. The main issue you had to deal with here is strong sunlight which creates a huge dynamic range in the image with bright highlights and deep shadows. You can make this work for you sometimes if the sun is getting lower in the sky and you use flash with the sun behind you if possible. Notice here you have the sun coming over your left shoulder which is causing the bright patch on the breast while the tail is in shadow. If you can move it's almost always a wise move in this case. Or wait until the mobile birds are in the right place while you stay still. In this particular case I think some fill flash would have helped too.

  3. #3
    Lance Peters
    Guest

    Default

    Hi Richard - John has pretty well nailed it - Good HA (angled just a smidgen towards you ) and nice catchlight in the eye - love the low shooting angle - really does make a difference.
    Light and the quality of it is really important - agree with Johns suggestions in regards to this.
    Keep em coming :)

  4. #4
    Julie Kenward
    Guest

    Default

    Richard, I also agree with the others - it is some harsh sunlight and a repositioning of the body (yours) would have helped but...I still think you did a very nice job. I'd try to lift the shadows with a shadow/highlight adjustment and see if that doesn't soften the overall image a bit more. I'd also consider cloning out some of the larger, darker specs in the BG so it becomes more even.

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