Great to see you here. Join our insightful photographic forum today and start tapping into a huge wealth of photographic knowledge. Completing our simple registration process will allow you to gain access to exclusive content, add your own topics and posts, share your work and connect with other members through your own private inbox! And don’t forget to say hi!
Excellent for sure.
100%
I agree, the skin is rough but don't touch the sharpness. Instead, in photoshop, use filters, surface blurr in the green layer only. Something like 5 pixels at the most and 4 for the strenght.This is a beautiful lady and a soft background, but it is too sharp in the face - showing to much "particles" (pardon my English) = Simply too sharp.
IMHO: You need some software - e.g. Nik software to smoothen out in the face, or perhaps using "neutral" color mode ( I still need to try this out for portraits)
Excellent for sure.
I guess this picture is a color picture and not a B&W.
I noticed on all pictures taken with this foveon sensor a magenta cast of 2% for the greys and 4 or 5% for the whites.
Get into photoshop, chose "selective correction", get to the whites and retranch 5%, do the same for the greys with 2%.
Compare both pictures.
I have done that on a number of pictures found here or elsewhere, I first noticed it on DP3 pictures.
That one really stands out! Nice, Bob!Up the bike trail early morning this week.
A few pictures from the trip....need to take a monopod as at 100 ISO too many OOF and motion disturbed artifacts....
Bike on the Bridge
Bob
Can you expand a little on this, please, and in the following way: image > selective correction > whatever..., so a PS simpleton like myself can follow the steps. I like the idea of selective correction but am not good enough in PS to do it!chose "selective correction", get to the whites and retranch 5%,