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Thread started 27 Sep 2012 (Thursday) 23:53
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Water fall in Alberta

 
neimad19
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Sep 27, 2012 23:53 |  #1

I'm a little on the fence with these 2 shots. I like them both but there's something that I feel they're lacking. What do you think of them? Any CC is appreciated no matter how harsh. I'm here to learn

The 1st is of the upper falls at Johnston canyon just before sunset and the 2nd is lower down the falls.

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Qbx
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Sep 28, 2012 08:54 |  #2

Maybe a little more saturation and contrast in both. Boost the green in the trees in #1. The fallen tree in #2 spoils the composition for me by presenting an almost artificial barrier-line in the scene, like someone put it there to create a swimming hole.


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neimad19
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Sep 28, 2012 15:22 |  #3

Thanks for the CC! I bumped up the saturation and the contrast slightly on the first one and I think it made a big difference, what do you think? I know what you mean about the log in the 2nd shot. I will give it a go cloning it out, though I might have to go back for a re-take.

Damien

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jack ­ lumber
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Sep 28, 2012 20:10 |  #4

Congratulations on being willing to accept some harsh critique, the best thing anyone did to help me improve, was to tell me my shots sucked,,, and why!
#1 has some good composition however it is soft and washed out. You have 3 pools all with a different shade of blue, I've been there many a time and have never seen that.
Curses and fist shaking to parks Canada for putting those gard rails up in the second shot, try and map them out! You live in Albirda, keep this shot and reshoot when you can,,, and notice the differance


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Snydremark
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Sep 28, 2012 20:20 |  #5

The framing and color are nice; like Jack, I love the multicolored pools. And I kind of like the log in that second one, as it makes a visual divider between the clear water and the blue.

However, both shots look like focus wasn't locked properly; there's no fine detail in either of them. Are these in a location that you can go back and re-shoot easily?

Did you use a tripod and turn off the IS for these?
Where were you focusing when you set these up?


- Eric S.: My Birds/Wildlife (external link) (R5, RF 800 f/11, Canon 16-35 F/4 MkII, Canon 24-105L f/4 IS, Canon 70-200L f/2.8 IS MkII, Canon 100-400L f/4.5-5.6 IS I/II)
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Qbx
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Sep 28, 2012 22:49 |  #6

neimad19 wrote in post #15055093 (external link)
Thanks for the CC! I bumped up the saturation and the contrast slightly on the first one and I think it made a big difference, what do you think? I know what you mean about the log in the 2nd shot. I will give it a go cloning it out, though I might have to go back for a re-take.

Damien

Yes better, but I was thinking of more like this:

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neimad19
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Oct 01, 2012 19:11 |  #7

Snydremark wrote in post #15056054 (external link)
The framing and color are nice; like Jack, I love the multicolored pools. And I kind of like the log in that second one, as it makes a visual divider between the clear water and the blue.

However, both shots look like focus wasn't locked properly; there's no fine detail in either of them. Are these in a location that you can go back and re-shoot easily?

Did you use a tripod and turn off the IS for these?
Where were you focusing when you set these up?

I still had IS on, on a tripod for both of these :oops: I just realized. Do you think that's why they look OOF?

I live in Canmore, about 35-40 mins from there and go quite often so Il do a retake next time I go out there.




  
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Snydremark
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Oct 01, 2012 19:39 |  #8

neimad19 wrote in post #15067047 (external link)
I still had IS on, on a tripod for both of these :oops: I just realized. Do you think that's why they look OOF?

I live in Canmore, about 35-40 mins from there and go quite often so Il do a retake next time I go out there.

That's almost certainly what happened, then. I learned that one the hard way on some long, night shots I took at one point :p


- Eric S.: My Birds/Wildlife (external link) (R5, RF 800 f/11, Canon 16-35 F/4 MkII, Canon 24-105L f/4 IS, Canon 70-200L f/2.8 IS MkII, Canon 100-400L f/4.5-5.6 IS I/II)
"The easiest way to improve your photos is to adjust the loose nut between the shutter release and the ground."

  
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neimad19
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Oct 01, 2012 19:53 |  #9

Snydremark wrote in post #15067169 (external link)
That's almost certainly what happened, then. I learned that one the hard way on some long, night shots I took at one point :p

I wonder if canon will ever develop a 'smart' IS that turns off when the lens is'nt moving. Maybe I should just stop being lazy, all it takes is a flick of a switch after all :P




  
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Snydremark
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Oct 01, 2012 20:48 |  #10

neimad19 wrote in post #15067230 (external link)
I wonder if canon will ever develop a 'smart' IS that turns off when the lens is'nt moving. Maybe I should just stop being lazy, all it takes is a flick of a switch after all :P

A number of newer lenses have "tripod sensing" IS to do just that; I don't, however, trust it. I'd rather flip the switch and not have to worry about it.


- Eric S.: My Birds/Wildlife (external link) (R5, RF 800 f/11, Canon 16-35 F/4 MkII, Canon 24-105L f/4 IS, Canon 70-200L f/2.8 IS MkII, Canon 100-400L f/4.5-5.6 IS I/II)
"The easiest way to improve your photos is to adjust the loose nut between the shutter release and the ground."

  
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neimad19
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Oct 01, 2012 22:01 |  #11

Snydremark wrote in post #15067434 (external link)
A number of newer lenses have "tripod sensing" IS to do just that; I don't, however, trust it. I'd rather flip the switch and not have to worry about it.

Really? There you go, you learn something new everyday. I probably wouldn't trust it either.




  
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Water fall in Alberta
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