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01-04-2010, 07:58 PM | #562 | ||
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Re: Photography Thread
I can see joining this thread was a very bad mistake on my part... I havn't even dug up any images and I can't keep my hands off...
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DBAll's tutorial is great for when there is lots of intricate detail that you don't feel like masking around bit by bit with the brush. It's super fast and effective. I prefer to use layers and a brush mask because it tends to capture a little more of the full color range and some other natural colors. For example, a red berry usually looks more natural if you brush in the brown spot on the berry, and the little green bud. But this takes TIME, LOTS OF TIME.
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01-04-2010, 08:28 PM | #563 | ||
Cigar Jesus
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Re: Photography Thread
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or you can do this as I typed a few pages back... it will grab the things the color selector failed to like spectrrr said if you use the lasso tool and the shift button (second paragraph): Quote:
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01-05-2010, 06:33 AM | #565 |
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Re: Photography Thread
Some band work I did for an up&coming Christian artist. Not my usual cup of joe and feels more like an edgy senior picture, but it was fun and he got what he needed
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01-05-2010, 06:40 AM | #566 | |
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Re: Photography Thread
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one day I hope to visit the island.... tho maybe I'll wait a few more years til my Spanish is passable This suggestion comes from someone who is admittedly VERY biased towards over-contrasty images, so take it with a rain of salt: Have you considered bumping the contrast of the city portion to make it more vibrant, or were you going for more of the grungy appearance?
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¨°º¤ø„¸¸„ø¤º°¨ "A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being right..." -Thomas Paine |
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01-05-2010, 06:48 AM | #567 |
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Re: Photography Thread
GIANT and beautiful Catholic church about 30min from my house in OH
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01-05-2010, 06:53 AM | #568 |
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Re: Photography Thread
The Journalist in me as always loved this sequence of images, even if the color and composition can leave something to be desired.
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01-05-2010, 06:59 AM | #569 |
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Re: Photography Thread
I really love this pic
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01-05-2010, 07:11 AM | #570 |
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Re: Photography Thread
wow Francis,your images are super awesome!do you have a blog or a web?
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01-05-2010, 07:46 AM | #571 | |
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Re: Photography Thread
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I've recently started the slow process of moving my entire collection online to http://cardullo.zenfolio.com/portfolio as a backup... but there is NOTHING To see at the moment... give me a while (a year ) and I'll get a portfolio of past work posted
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01-05-2010, 07:54 AM | #572 | |
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Re: Photography Thread
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I swear I am looking at my stuff. Unfortunately, mine was all done with medium format (Hasselblad 500CM and Mamiya C330) and is antiquated. I would have to scan all that stuff. I have very little in the digital world as I left the business around 14 years ago when I relocated out of state, when digital was just starting to take over for wedding photographers. Today, most of what I have done involves my grandson. I burned out doing over 1,200 weddings in my time, in a 10 year period, and didn't want to see a camera for a good while, until the joy of my life came along a couple of years ago.
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01-05-2010, 08:04 AM | #574 | |
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Re: Photography Thread
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Yours more modern in spite of B&W. Both of us seem to enjoy fisheyes, although I generally limited my use of it for shots like this, that incorporated an impressive background. You don't want to know how much I paid for that Hasselblad fisheye. I think I must still be paying for it 20 years later. Nice to see stuff that reminds me of my days chasing brides around in limos.
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01-05-2010, 08:06 AM | #575 |
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Re: Photography Thread
I havn't read the whole thread yet... but the few I've seen have been great
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01-05-2010, 08:17 AM | #576 | |
Feeling at Home
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Re: Photography Thread
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01-05-2010, 08:32 AM | #577 | ||
Back in the midwest!
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Re: Photography Thread
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I learned ever so briefly on my father's hassy system (he had retired 10 years prior but kept the gear), then ended up selling it to finance the shift to Canon digital. You're assessment of a bounce flash is correct. I started in news journalism and that influenced my wedding work considerably. Lighting was kept small and on camera, high ISO and available light whenever possible, I never even owned a tripod if you can believe it. Quote:
Thanks for sharing, love the first pic, reminds me so much of the beauty of film. Can't get that kind of a shot out of the camera in digital, have to head into Photoshop to make it happen. Quite doable, but prohibitively time consuming considering the last wedding I shot was 3900 images in one day (average wedding hovered around 2000 images), so I had to pick and choose my photoshop battles .... I LOVE B&W images, LOVE em. There are not very many shots I wouldn't prefer to see in B&W. Fisheye shots probably only accounted for 1% of my images for the day... just a couple of the church/reception hall etc to capture the scope of things... but I always considered the shots to be indispensable for capturing the story of the day. I also had a 14mm aspherical non-fish that I loved even more than a fish on many shots.
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01-05-2010, 08:48 AM | #578 | |
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Re: Photography Thread
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on a cropped sensor, I would highly recommend one of the APS-C sized 10-24 or 12-22 type lenses before I got a fisheye. (translates to a 16-35 range on full frame). Fish is fun, but you can use a superwide sooo much more often.
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01-05-2010, 08:48 AM | #579 |
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Re: Photography Thread
Great pictures everyone thanks for posting them.
Chris.....
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01-05-2010, 08:52 AM | #580 | |
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Re: Photography Thread
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Fisheye is not for every shot in my opinion. There are many instances where I just don't think it works well at all. I always tried to mine where I could keep the main subject of my photo as normal as possible, while distorting the surroundings. That was just my personal preference.
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