I pulled this panorama from competition, thought it needed more...but I don't know what.
FYI-it is tack sharp at 100%.
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
.
Jul 18, 2008 08:29 | #1 I pulled this panorama from competition, thought it needed more...but I don't know what. The things you do for yourself die with you, the things you do for others live forever.
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poloman Cream of the Crop 5,442 posts Likes: 7 Joined Dec 2006 Location: Southern Illinois More info | Jul 18, 2008 10:12 | #2 I think the problem is the white line of the grasses in the water to the upper right. It immediately draws my eye. Would some selective dodging and burning help! "All those who believe in psychokinesis, raise my right hand!" Steven Wright
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joedlh Cream of the Crop 5,515 posts Gallery: 52 photos Likes: 688 Joined Dec 2007 Location: Long Island, NY, N. America, Sol III, Orion Spur, Milky Way, Local Group, Virgo Cluster, Laniakea. More info | Jul 18, 2008 12:49 | #3 14,000 pixels wide. What did you do, shoot this with a Mamiya digital back? Joe
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LeuceDeuce Goldmember 2,362 posts Joined Oct 2007 Location: Vancouver BC, Canada More info | Jul 18, 2008 13:06 | #4 joedlh wrote in post #5936595 14,000 pixels wide. What did you do, shoot this with a Mamiya digital back? I think the basic problem with this image is that the grass is in full sun and the birds wander in and out of the shade. The bright grass draws the eye. It's a shame that the setting is flawed because you really captured a moment. A different time of day might help, but how often are you going to see this? From your comment I am guessing that you haven't deduced that this is the same bird, and it's a stitched pano. my website: Light & Shadow
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poloman Cream of the Crop 5,442 posts Likes: 7 Joined Dec 2006 Location: Southern Illinois More info | Jul 18, 2008 14:11 | #5 There is a natural line in this image just below the line of the grass entering the water. "All those who believe in psychokinesis, raise my right hand!" Steven Wright
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kirkt Cream of the Crop More info | Jul 18, 2008 15:43 | #6 I know it is sort of gimmicky, but with this particular version of the image it may be the perfect time for a selective color on black and white image. The BLUE heron is the focus, and you have captured that steely blue real nicely - I also think that the blue coloring will be subtle for a selective color piece versus the typical red rose on a B&W background. Try converting a duplicated layer to B&W or partially desaturated layer and masking back in the heron image sequence, both in the herons themselves and their reflections. Also, you may want to treat the B&W background by making it appear translucent, so that it is again deemphasized, as it is a little distracting (especially at the left of the image, where my eye wants to return to fly through the sequence again). This will hopefully put more emphasis on the cool pano sequence you've captured and deemphasize the bright white spots at the base of the grass, etc. that is confusing the image a little. i am making these judgments on the relatively tiny preview of the huge original, so what I see here may be less confusing at full res. Kirk
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Kirk, those selective B&W things aren't my forte and arty just isn't my bag. But thanks for looking and offering. The things you do for yourself die with you, the things you do for others live forever.
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kirkt Cream of the Crop More info | Jul 18, 2008 22:33 | #8 Cool. I will be interested to see how you work this one out, because it is a real nice concept. Kirk
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gabrioladude Senior Member 422 posts Likes: 1 Joined Aug 2005 Location: Toronto More info | this is the type of image which asks to be played with Frank (aka Gabrioladude)
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neumanns Goldmember 1,465 posts Likes: 1 Joined Feb 2007 Location: North Centeral Minnesota More info | Jul 19, 2008 07:23 | #10 You could pump out 100 other variations...But your gonna get varying opinions on wich one is the favorite. I like it as is! 7D, Sigma 8-16, 17-55, 70-200 2.8 IS, 580ExII, ........Searching for Talent & Skill; Will settle for Blind Luck!
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JohnE Goldmember 1,025 posts Likes: 1 Joined May 2006 Location: Amarillo, TX More info | Jul 19, 2008 07:47 | #11 To me the bird's color is too close to the background color. (Blue/green) Somehow or another if you can make the bird stand out more, it would help, but I'm not sure how. John Elser
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Is this a better direction? yes/no/garish... The things you do for yourself die with you, the things you do for others live forever.
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LeuceDeuce Goldmember 2,362 posts Joined Oct 2007 Location: Vancouver BC, Canada More info | I had a bit of a go at this. Tried to paint in some colour over the stark white reeds. Replaced some reeds to break up the continuity of the overexposed areas. Deepened the shadow on the left to enhance depth. Brightened the heron. my website: Light & Shadow
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howzitboy Goldmember 2,948 posts Joined May 2007 Location: Hawaii More info | Jul 20, 2008 12:56 | #14 chauncey, i like the first ones color of the birds. nice dark blue instead of the lighter color u chose. http://onehourwedding.blogspot.com/
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Pretty sure that this is it, had to start over. The things you do for yourself die with you, the things you do for others live forever.
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