what is the best way to clean up a "blah" sky in photograph?
pokertable Member 130 posts Joined Dec 2005 More info | Jan 05, 2006 00:14 | #1 what is the best way to clean up a "blah" sky in photograph? Rebel XT Black
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tim Light Bringer 51,010 posts Likes: 375 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Wellington, New Zealand More info | Jan 05, 2006 02:20 | #2 If you shot RAW expose the photo twice and blend as in this tutorial Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
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StealthLude Goldmember 3,680 posts Joined Dec 2005 More info | Tim!!!!!! You did it again!!! [[Gear List]]
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cmM Goldmember 5,705 posts Joined Apr 2004 Location: Chicago / San Francisco More info | StealthLude wrote: Tim!!!!!! You did it again!!! Thank You so much, I use a LOT of photoshop and found this to be most useful!!! Now i cant wait to give exopsure bracketing a try on my 20D!!! They say you cant use RAW files, why not turn them into JPG files prior to bringing them into photoshop. Just dont mess with any exposure correction? Why would you do that if you shoot in RAW? You can just process the same RAW file with different exposure compensation and you're doing the same thing.
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abat Senior Member 355 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jan 2004 Location: Sydney, Australia More info | Magic! I imagine using RAW you could process the same file with different exposure compensations and them blend them with this technique - as long as you don't overdo it. G5, 30D, Tamron 17-50 f/2.8, Canon 70-200 f/4L, Kenko 1.4x and 420EX.
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benf64 Senior Member 426 posts Joined Oct 2005 Location: Wesley Chapel, Florida More info | i am glad u mention that, cause i was going to ask the same thing about changing the exposure in raw (one dark and one light) opposed to Bracketing with the camera. Same results, right? or isnt it? Ben
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GSHodg Member 138 posts Joined Mar 2005 Location: Galway, Ireland More info | Yep it's very useful to make two exposures from RAW and merge them to extend dynamic range - especially when you didn't have a tripod. You can't go too many stops before they look funny though, so if you want a very wide range you should do the bracketing in camera (remeber the tripod). benf64 wrote: i am glad u mention that, cause i was going to ask the same thing about changing the exposure in raw (one dark and one light) opposed to Bracketing with the camera. Same results, right? or isnt it? Gordon
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benf64 Senior Member 426 posts Joined Oct 2005 Location: Wesley Chapel, Florida More info | Jan 06, 2006 06:47 | #8 ok, thanks for the info!! Ben
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delinian Senior Member 676 posts Joined May 2005 More info | Jan 06, 2006 06:54 | #9 I use this "technique" in CS2, and PSE3. Dennis
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Tsmith Formerly known as Bluedog_XT 10,429 posts Likes: 26 Joined Jul 2005 Location: South_the 601 More info | Jan 06, 2006 07:17 | #10 I've had success in RawShooter exposing the image for sky detail and then making shadow highlight adjustments via: Shadow Contrast|Fill Light|Curves/Levels.
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ATucker Member 178 posts Likes: 2 Joined Dec 2004 Location: Cleveland, OH More info | benf64 wrote: i am glad u mention that, cause i was going to ask the same thing about changing the exposure in raw (one dark and one light) opposed to Bracketing with the camera. Same results, right? or isnt it? It is not the same thing nor can you expect the same results. Tom
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benf64 Senior Member 426 posts Joined Oct 2005 Location: Wesley Chapel, Florida More info | Jan 06, 2006 10:15 | #12 i guess i need to practice doing bracketing as well...only tried it once so far and i will compare the bracketing vs using raw to change exposure method. I already bought the DRI pro plugin to help me. Ben
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ATucker Member 178 posts Likes: 2 Joined Dec 2004 Location: Cleveland, OH More info | benf64 wrote: i guess i need to practice doing bracketing as well...only tried it once so far and i will compare the bracketing vs using raw to change exposure method. I already bought the DRI pro plugin to help me. thanks I should be more clear. Your results (the important part) will vary depending on the scene. If the scene is full midtones, then you may see no real difference in the results. However, if you are shooting into a setting (or rising sun) - or any scene with a large dynamic range - you should absolutely see better results from bracketing as opposed to exposing once for the highlights and trying to bring out the shadows in postprocessing. Tom
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