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Adobe Releases Lightroom 3 (Final)Good news for Lightroom users. Adobe has released final code of version 3 of the product. Click here for more info Fixing Bad Photos or photos that weren’t any good to begin withSince the advent of digital photography and digital editing software, it has become far too easy for photographers to take really badly exposed images and correct them in post processing. While the end result yields a better image than what was captured, sadly this is NOT really photography, yet as we progress more into the digital age, such image manipulations are being passed off as professional photography and even worse as “fine art”. In this tutorial I will show you examples of what I mean and how I can take what I consider a really shoddy image (yes even pro’s take shit shots from time to time) and how I can turn that image into a much better looking image, but is it photography? Personally I say not really as what I am about to show you crosses the line from photography into the world of digital manipulation and the resulting image is a digital image but I personally don’t consider it to be an actual true photograph any longer. We start out with our RAW image straight from the camera. The image was captured against the setting sun which causes the camera to hit all sorts of obstacles when trying to expose this scene. We don’t want to lose the lovely orange glow of the sky and as a result we capture that but all the shadow areas are completely blacked out. The starting image below shows the resulting situation many a photographer is faced with. We captured that lovely glow of the sky but there is no detail in the shadow or midtone areas, at least that’s what we think. ![]() Our starting RAW image, unedited straight out of the camera. This is how the camera interpreted the exposure and had you been shooting with film this is pretty much what you would be stuck with. So now how do we go ahead and rescue this photograph? First of all I open this RAW image in my favourite RAW processing application and the manipulation begins. I first introduce “Fill Light” so I crank that slider from 0 to about 85. I then play with the tone curve profile of the image (highlights, lights, shadows and darks). I drag my shadow slider up to about +45, I’ll take the Darks slider to +25, I’ll take the Lights slider to -25 and finally I’ll push the Highlights slider to +10. I am now left with the following image but I’m not quite done yet. Amazing to see how much information the camera really captured in the shadow but the manipulations carried out thus far already exceed the actual exposure. ![]() We've done some minor adjustments in our RAW editing programme, manipulating the shadow and midtone areas. Suddenly we start to see something peering out of what was previously total darkness. Okay so things are looking a little better now and as it stands above is a marked improvement from the original but I’m now going to push it even more. I should stop with the changes I made above which to me look better than what I am about to do but now I’m going to go to insane extremes to further illustrate the kind of work I am seeing in many places on the web. Messing with all those sliders has revealed detail in what was previously just black but by doing these adjustments I’ve introduced a lot of noise and artifacts into the image. Okay so I’ll just do some noise removal … easy peasy. I now take my image into my image editing software and after doing some noise removal I also want to bring a little more detail into the image. So after I’ve done my noise removal I am going to mess some more with the highlights, shadows and midtones and I’ll do this in my image editing program by doing some manipulation on highlights, shadows and midtones contrasts, I call this “raping the shadows”. Each image editing programme has the above adjustments, some programmes call them by sligthly different names. Okay so I messed around for less than a minute and now I have the following image. ![]() Okay so after some more manipulation of the image it's actually starting to look like something but we can still play with this some more. Now I want to adjust the colours a little and make it look even “better” so I now mess some more with my contrasts, brightness, levels, curves and I add some more warmth using a photo warming filter and at the same time I want to try and get the sky closer to the original colour captured. Each time I’m doing changes I’m introducing noise and artifacts into the image but I can fix that in my final steps with some more noise removal. My final image which I “could” spend another hour messing with would look a whole lot better, in fact I could make make it look much much better but for the point of this tutorial I’ll stop processing now to give you an indication of what can be done with some very quick manipulation and how a really poorly exposed photograph has been turned into something better or perhaps worse looking. ![]() The once ugly duckling now starts to actually look like something (or does it), but is it still a photograph? To the untrained eye, a quick glance and people will saw “ooh it looks nice” but the image is filled with imperfections now, because I pushed it past certain limits I have introduced many things that need to be fixed now. However, because I am displaying these images to you on the web at a mere 400 pixels in size it’s even easier for me to hide the MANY imperfections that have been introduced as a result of the manipulation I have done, this is another factor that bad photographers rely on, the fact that at a small resolution on the web they can make a poor image actually look ok. I’ve however over exaggerated the imperfections in these examples. I know if I spent another hour working on this image I could make it absolutely perfect and you would hardly notice a single imperfection but …. you know what …. I’m going no further with it, this was merely to demonstrate something and personally an image like this will never make it into any of my collections nor will I even try to pass it off as a photograph and least of all as fine art. I simply keep images like to demonstrate things like this and normally anything that came out like this would end up deleted on the spot. I will rather re-shoot the scene using the proper methods to capture the scene correctly in a single frame that requires only very slight corrections which are considered acceptable. Now when I say “acceptable” what do I mean? Well if I shoot the scene correctly using filters to hold back the exposure on the sky while getting my foreground exposed, I can do this in a single frame, I can do very minor RAW adjustments which do not involve dragging any slider more than 5-10 steps from its original setting and do not involve manipulating the image beyond what you can actually see straight out of camera. I will be able to enter the image in any leading competition (not this image of course) and when my original RAW image is requested for authentication I will not feel any worry or resistance sending the original to the judges. This is the big difference between photography and digital imaging. What I have produced above is a digital image and quite honestly no longer a photograph. I would not feel comfortable nor would I dare entering it into a competition (it’s a crap shot for a starter) nor would I try to pass it off or sell it or anything produced in a similar fashion to somebody as photography or fine art. Some competitions allow digitally manipulated images but they are few and far between. Sadly though I see more and more photographers starting as beginners who learn to digitally rescue their bad photos and within a year they are calling themselves professionals and actually marketing and selling images produced using similar techniques as above. What’s even more worrying is that these photographers actually believe they are really good and instead of learning to take better photos they rely on snapping anything knowing they can fix it later. It’s a really bad approach to photography and does not further the art of photography and instead in my personal opinion it hurts the artform immensely. By all means there is a time and place for slightly enhancing shadow areas in an image but doing such agressive manipulations as above is not “slight” by any means. Photography forums all over the place are filled with photographers preaching and teaching these techniques and misleading other beginners into following such methods, all this does is produce many more bad photographers who again in a very short time are trying to market and sell this nonsense as photographic art. Too many of these “photographers” have their friends, family and facebook fans telling them how wonderful their photographs are but they are also not being told the whole story of how the person “created” the image and to the untrained eyes it looks perfect but it’s so easy to spot manipulated images and the more you know about photography the easier you will spot manipulated imagery. Unfortunately once these photographers get caught in this trap of digital manipulation they seem to know it all and will simply not take criticism from a professional photographer but would rather remain blinded by the “wow” and “awesome” comments they receive from their friends and fans and as a result they will never really progress. While they may remain blinded by the truth, I say to such photographers please don’t think that it is not possible to spot these manipulations from a mile away, it’s damn easy to spot a) when you actually know a lot about photography and b) when you have a trained eye. Stop fooling yourself that this is photography, stop relying on photoshop to fix your bad photography and actually learn to take better photos. 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Some of the best Photography Quotes of all TimeSometimes I do get to places just when God’s ready to have somebody click the shutter. ~Ansel Adams No place is boring, if you’ve had a good night’s sleep and have a pocket full of unexposed film. ~Robert Adams It’s weird that photographers spend years or even a whole lifetime, trying to capture moments that added together, don’t even amount to a couple of hours. ~James Lalropui Keivom When you photograph people in colour you photograph their clothes. But when you photograph people in B&W, you photograph their souls! ~Ted Grant Often while traveling with a camera we arrive just as the sun slips over the horizon of a moment, too late to expose film, only time enough to expose our hearts. ~Minor White A photograph is usually looked at – seldom looked into. ~Ansel Adams The world just does not fit conveniently into the format of a 35mm camera. ~W. Eugene Smith Dodging and burning are steps to take care of mistakes God made in establishing tonal relationships. ~Ansel Adams Most plagiarists, like the drone, have neither taste to select, industry to acquire, nor skill to improve, but impudently pilfer the honey ready prepared, from the hive ~ Walter Colton I think a photography class should be a requirement in all educational programs because it makes you see the world rather than just look at it. ~Author Unknown There are no rules for good photographs, there are only good photographs. ~Ansel Adams Every time someone tells me how sharp my photos are, I assume that it isn’t a very interesting photograph. If it were, they would have more to say. ~Author Unknown When words become unclear, I shall focus with photographs. When images become inadequate, I shall be content with silence. ~Ansel Adams There will be times when you will be in the field without a camera. And, you will see the most glorious sunset or the most beautiful scene that you have ever witnessed. Don’t be bitter because you can’t record it. Sit down, drink it in, and enjoy it for what it is! ~DeGriff Fear is a darkroom where negatives develop. ~Usman B. Asif You don’t take a photograph, you make it. ~Ansel Adams Buying a Nikon doesn’t make you a photographer. It makes you a Nikon owner. ~Author Unknown I just think it’s important to be direct and honest with people about why you’re photographing them and what you’re doing. After all, you are taking some of their soul. ~Mary Ellen Mark Photographers deal in things which are continually vanishing and when they have vanished there is no contrivance on earth which can make them come back again. ~Henri Cartier-Bresson Everyone has a photographic memory, but not everyone has film. ~Author Unknown One photo out of focus is a mistake, ten photo out of focus are an experimentation, one hundred photo out of focus are a style. ~Author Unknown Michael Poliza – Your Chance to Win a Poliza BookPhotographer Michael Poliza has been around the world providing us with breath taking aerial views above multiple fascinating continents. From Africa to Antarctica he has never escaped a chance to share his view of the world with all of us. Now you have the chance to interact with this multi-faceted photographer. Exclusive, never before seen pictures have just been released TODAY on his new microsite. View his new site here: There you can enter his Twitter contest to win one of his books. Just capture what one of his photos means to you in a tweet, and win your very own Poliza book at http://teneues.com/poliza/contest HDR: Faithful representation or gross over manipulation?With the advent of HDR (High dynamic range) in recent years, the world of photography has quite possibly changed forever. For the most part it’s a good thing as HDR allows a photographer to faithfully represent a scene and allows the photographer to more than make up for where the camera lacks with exposing on highlights, shadows and midtones all at the same time. There is however the bad side to HDR, the side unfortunately that is quite possibly causing harm to the true art of photography. Many an unskilled or intermediate photographer has come to rely on HDR as the saving grace for substandard photography and can take the worst shot imaginable and after several hours of manipulating it in Photoshop or their HDR software can knock out a moderately okay looking image. The sad part is that these types of photographers never develop their skills as a photographer and instead will always be happy with poor exposures simply because they know they can “fix” it later. The even sadder part is that they then pose themselves to the world as professionals and cause a great amount of damage to the industry of photographers who are truly masters at their artform. I’ve seen so many photographers, both good and bad ones, that have fallen into the HDR trap and I’ve seen the best of the best start relying entirely on the fix it later syndrome and overall this does not bode well for the growth of photography. Many of these HDR or image blending techniques are motivated as “faithful” representations of the scene because the camera cannot properly capture the dynamic range. While the latter part may be true, the end result of many of these images is nothing near to a faithful representation and instead the photographers get carried away with producing what can only be termed as a piece of graphic art and not really a photograph. Saturation is often pushed to the extreme of extremes, colours are manipulated and often added and the end result is not even a shadow of a “faithful” representation of the scene. The problem is that not many photographers these days seem to actually LOOK at the scene and pay attention to all the finer details before actually taking one shot. If they did they would quickly be able to look at their finished product and realise it’s nothing like what their eye (with all the dynamic range in the world) actually saw.
Love it or hate it, HDR is here to stay but I do hope to see lazy photographers start using it more responsibly in the future and not relying on the “fix it later” syndrome. I also hope to see them stop preaching these bad practices to other beginners because it’s really a case of the blind leading the blind.
Microstock: how to avoid Poisonous PicturesThere has been quite a big reaction to my previous article about the perils of companies using microstock images, with comments ranging from ‘hilarious‘, ‘there ought to be a health warning attached to all micro stock purchases‘ and ‘I might just frame that and put it in my office‘ to… ‘biased hypocritical nonsense‘. I guess you can’t please everyone. Many designers and researchers have also said that providing their clients with a link to the article is a simple and effective way to show them that with photo purchases, it’s not just down to price. Buying cheap can end up an expensive mistake. What I did not explain in the article (and I have had numerous queries about since) is how I found all these examples of the same image being used across multiple sites. With recent technological advances, it has become quick and easy, which is why companies are going to have to really think about the consequences of using microstock images to represent their brand and reputation. The key is a website called tineye.com which describes itself as a ‘Reverse Image Search’, and I think it is a tool that every designer and picture researcher needs to make an integral part of their work. I will now set out a ‘how to’ on using TinEye in your picture research: Go to the TinEye website, and download their TinEye plugin for your browser. It’s free! African Photography Blog – South Africa Photographic News, Articles, Tutorials is Digg proof thanks to caching by WP Super Cache |