Actually, i did something like you suggested, and the final results were
better, although for the purpose of putting the images up I wanted to show
them with no adjustments.  I was hoping you'd comment. Thanks!

Shel 


> [Original Message]
> From: Paul Stenquist 

> They look very good to me. I might have pulled down the exposure a wee 
> bit in the converter (on both) and pushed up the brightness a bit to 
> bring the mid range back to where it was. That would give you a little 
> more shadow detail, equivalent mid range tones, and a tad less 
> highlight. If I lost any midrange separation, I would have upped the 
> contrast a little. Of course, the optimum look is highly subjective and 
> dependent to a great extent on the viewing monitor.
> Paul
> On Sep 3, 2005, at 11:26 AM, Shel Belinkoff wrote:
>
> > Yesterday, while sitting in the garden, I grabbed a couple of shots of
> > these leaves.  The entire purpose of these exposures was to see if the
> > camera worked, to use RAW, to see if there was any purple fringing 
> > because
> > of contrast considerations, and to try to get an exposure that would 
> > show
> > the shadows and dark areas nicely without frying the highlights.
> >
> > The lens was the 77mm Ltd, and it seems that there's no purple 
> > fringing in
> > these shots.  While technically the first exposure shows no fried
> > highlights (couldn't find a spot that read higher than 253 in the 
> > bright
> > areas) a second exposure, made with a 1/3 stop faster shutter speed 
> > looked
> > a little better in the bright areas without loosing any detail in the
> > darker areas.
> >
> > Both pics were converted to JPEG directly from the RAW image in 
> > Photoshop.
> > No sharpening or adjustments of any sort.
> >
> > http://home.earthlink.net/~my-pics/test1.html
> > 200 ISO, 1/250 sec, F8.0
> >
> >
> > http://home.earthlink.net/~my-pics/test2.html
> > 200 ISO, 1/350 sec, F8.0
> >
> > I think these two shots show what a great difference a small exposure
> > adjustment can make - at least to my eyes and sensibilities.  Looking
> > forward to any comments of the technical quality of these two pics.
> >
> >
> > Shel
> >
> >


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