BLS wrote:
I'm new to RawShooter Essentials, so I don't know what I'm doing. The image below is my first attempt with it. All I did was "Auto All" + "Outdoor Normal" + a wee bit of saturation. I'd like your assessment of color, contrast, exposure, etc. What could be improved?
And can you please tell me the difference between "Highlight Contrast" and "Shadow Contrast?" I read the manual, but I couldn't find an explanation.
You're welcome to critique the composition too -- need to learn.
Image was taken with 300D, 24-70mm 2.8L @ 28mm, f8@1/640, and ISO 200.
Thanks for looking.
Barbara
Regarding White Balance, I prefer to use the White Balance Tool (the eyedropper) rather than picking a category from the Color Balance drop down list box or using the Color Temperature slider. Find an object in your scene that you know is white, or preferably a middle gray with no color cast and bink on that with the eye dropper White Balance Tool. [In RSE it's called Pick White Balance]
Then, if you decide that gives what look like good colors everywhere, you're done. If it doesn't look good, find another object that looks like it should be neutral and try that. That's how the color balance tool is designed to work. It assumes that you are binking on a patch of neutral gray (all three color channels are balanced) and it will modify all the pixels in the whole image so as to make the ones you binked on come out balanced.
Highlight Contrast is the degree to which the different shades of near white are separated from one another in the highlights (higher, brighter tones). Obviously, shadow contrast is the same concept in the shadows (lower, darker tones). Think of the regions as being roughly in thirds in the histogram, with mid-tones in the middle third.
When the contrast is high in a given range of tones, then you see detail in that range of tones and the histogram distribution will be evenly spread out over those tones. Conversely, when the contrast is low over a given range of tones, the distribution will be bunched up over that range of values in the histogram, and you won't see any detail in that range of tones - just a monotonous sameness throughout.
One can visualize the local contrast from a different viewpoint when using the Curves tool, but that's another story.