Friday, April 15, 2016
This How We Do It...
A lot of my friends ask me how I like to finish a picture. I always tell them it's a matter of preferences of what the photographer likes. Some like a more realistic image while others like over saturated or HDR effects in their works. The truth is, what ever makes you happy is the best application for you. I constantly change or try out many different techniques in my post processing because I like to keep up with the new and changing soft ware and my personal tastes change over time too. Generally I prefer a realistic look with a slight touch of extra color and detail. Here is the way I usually approach my work.
I upload all my images to Adobe Camera Raw and make a back up copy for safe keeping. I use one copy for post and I look for an image with pose that pleases me. I find with animals, pictures with eye content with the viewer make great choices. I then check to make sure the image is razor sharp especially in the eyes. I then open the image in the raw converter.
In the converter I make adjustments to exposures and any minor cropping I decide. I do not like to crop a lot. I mostly do it to assist the composition. In this case I didn't have enough reach with the 400mm lens I was using so I had to crop more than usual. I also set the sharping and noise slides to 0. These need to be applied later on.
I now use Aurora HDR Pro to bring back the highlights add any color saturation and detail. Constantly switching from 100% to fit viewing mode to make sure any changes I make do not destroy the image quality of the pixels. I find I can really get the 3D effects I like with this application so I have incorporated in to my main process. Here is where most of the magic is done. I add my sharpening and noise reduction here. Once I am satisfied with my image I open it in Photoshop CC.
Here I clone out any unwanted items that will distract the viewers eye. This image had sunlight reflections in the background I felt needed to be eliminated.
Here is a thing I like to do. I rotate my image 180 degrees and add a soft layer mask that lets me lighten or darken any areas I want. This technique shows me if my composition is working and lets me blend in or out the subject matter to make my image pleasing to view.
I save the image to my files, then resize the image for the web.
Here is the finished image. Hope you enjoyed reading this and I hope it will help you become the photographer you want to be.
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