Wow! Very nice work!
I have zero practical experience with layers. I've been essentially
flying blind ever since I got Photoshop.
One of these days, I'm going to spend some hours watching tutorials.
On 10/3/2010 1:19 AM, P. J. Alling wrote:
Just to be annoying here's one of my efforts, I used a number of layers.
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--%20chartreusecouperevisited%26revised.html
On 10/3/2010 2:10 AM, Walter Gilbert wrote:
Thanks, P.J.
You're absolutely right. I noticed the halo around the bird about
ten minutes after I'd uploaded it. Only, I didn't use any layers. I
simply desaturated the colors in the original. I'll see if I can get
rid of some of that.
-- Walt
On 10/3/2010 12:54 AM, P. J. Alling wrote:
Imitation hand coloring of B&W can be effective, but you have to be
careful to avoid halos around your colored layer. Just think of it
as a case of Less is More, unless you intended for it to look the
way it does, in which case to quote Emily Litela . /Nevermind/.
On 10/3/2010 12:52 AM, Walter Gilbert wrote:
Hi all,
This is a shot I took way back at the end of May, shortly after I
got my K-x. I've been tinkering with it off and on ever since and
can't bring myself to abandon it, as it was the first in-flight
bird I ever captured that I was somewhat proud of. The color of
the background was absolutely horrid in the original photo, and it
was pretty noisy by K-x standards. I messed with toning down the
colors (it was an abhorrent mix of brown, green, rust, and yellow
originally) until I finally decided it looked best with everything
desaturated out, except for the red of the bird. I'm still trying
to deal with some ugliness on the beak, but I'm slowly getting it
out of there.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/walt_gilbert/5045841583/
K-x, DAL 50-200mm, f/5.6, ISO 400, 1/1250 sec
It was shot in jpeg format, so I'm somewhat limited in my options.
And this is a resized (2400 pixels long-side) version after some
minor cropping (I'm trying to stay as close to the original
resolution as possible for now). Any tips on what I can do, aside
from the cropping, to make it a more effective image?
Comments, critiques, and/or relentless hectoring welcome.
Best,
Walt
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