Great photos
Great photos
Check out great shots from:
fiftypercentchanceofrain.com
Hit the link "St.John" under the first picture. Great stuff!
Vickie H, I think we maybe zeroing in on your photo secrets!
fiftypercentchanceofrain.com
Hit the link "St.John" under the first picture. Great stuff!
Vickie H, I think we maybe zeroing in on your photo secrets!
When you find yourself in a hole.... quit digging.
JT is right... fantastic photos.
www.fiftypercentchanceofrain.com for the blog
and
http://www.mjsphotographyonline.com/Lan ... 6506_Wgbps
for Virgin Islands photos by Jason St Peter
Thanks JT!
www.fiftypercentchanceofrain.com for the blog
and
http://www.mjsphotographyonline.com/Lan ... 6506_Wgbps
for Virgin Islands photos by Jason St Peter
Thanks JT!
... no longer a stranger to paradise
-
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Oct 06, 2009 10:27 pm
- Location: Texas
-
- Posts: 3014
- Joined: Fri Mar 06, 2009 8:21 am
- Location: Western NY State
To my eye, there is a fine line with HDR, and if you go too far over that line, the images start to look too unreal and too much like those cheesy Hawaiian paintings like this:

That said, if your intent and tastes lean more towards those enhanced images than the photo-real images, the effect can be stunning like those linked to above and like those done by this flickr member who lives in the Scottish highlands:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/babsphotosecosse/

That said, if your intent and tastes lean more towards those enhanced images than the photo-real images, the effect can be stunning like those linked to above and like those done by this flickr member who lives in the Scottish highlands:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/babsphotosecosse/
When we come to place where the sea and the sky collide
Throw me over the edge and let my spirit glide
Throw me over the edge and let my spirit glide
jmq, I agree 100 pct and that is a great example of being unreal. Jason's photos don't quite have that feel. It's that thin line as you say.
@vickieh-I'm also going to give it a try. Takes much more setting up and a tripod is almost a necessity.
What I have started to do is shoot in RAW. That's a big upgrade for me and seems to give me more control. I blame MARGO or CAL GIRL for all this new photo mania on my part.
@vickieh-I'm also going to give it a try. Takes much more setting up and a tripod is almost a necessity.
What I have started to do is shoot in RAW. That's a big upgrade for me and seems to give me more control. I blame MARGO or CAL GIRL for all this new photo mania on my part.
-
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Oct 06, 2009 10:27 pm
- Location: Texas
Pipanale,
promoguy is correct 90% of these shots are all done in camera. It is through a process called auto bracketing which shoots multiple exposures. The multiple exposures in camera really helps when you have such a high contrast between lights and darks for example bright white sand and a deep blue sky or during a sunset. I then take the photos and blend them together using a program called photomatix and then fine tune in Photoshop by cleaning up dust spots fine tuning the tones and using a process called layermasking which helps tone down what photomatix has done by bringing more of the original files into play on top of the tonemapped image. So my HDRs are a combination HDR digital blend. The post work varies by shot but can sometimes take anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours.
Also as others have pointed out my tripod goes with me everywhere! It reduces any camera shake and is a must for good HDR or blended photographs. Thanks again for everyone’s comments and keep the questions coming.
promoguy is correct 90% of these shots are all done in camera. It is through a process called auto bracketing which shoots multiple exposures. The multiple exposures in camera really helps when you have such a high contrast between lights and darks for example bright white sand and a deep blue sky or during a sunset. I then take the photos and blend them together using a program called photomatix and then fine tune in Photoshop by cleaning up dust spots fine tuning the tones and using a process called layermasking which helps tone down what photomatix has done by bringing more of the original files into play on top of the tonemapped image. So my HDRs are a combination HDR digital blend. The post work varies by shot but can sometimes take anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours.
Also as others have pointed out my tripod goes with me everywhere! It reduces any camera shake and is a must for good HDR or blended photographs. Thanks again for everyone’s comments and keep the questions coming.
- silverheels
- Posts: 890
- Joined: Thu Aug 10, 2006 10:18 am
- Location: The Nutmeg State
These are great. I just got back from the Highlands and the Isle of Skye and had thought to do an off topic trip review, but my pictures aren't that good. Going through her pictures was a treat.jmq wrote:That said, if your intent and tastes lean more towards those enhanced images than the photo-real images, the effect can be stunning like those linked to above and like those done by this flickr member who lives in the Scottish highlands:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/babsphotosecosse/
Lovermont

Oh, please do a report and add your pics. I saw babsphotosecosse's too and thought the same as you. We were both places at least ten years ago - I would love to see what you saw (photos and text) and revisit places and see how they have changed.Lovermont wrote:These are great. I just got back from the Highlands and the Isle of Skye and had thought to do an off topic trip review, but my pictures aren't that good. Going through her pictures was a treat.jmq wrote:That said, if your intent and tastes lean more towards those enhanced images than the photo-real images, the effect can be stunning like those linked to above and like those done by this flickr member who lives in the Scottish highlands:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/babsphotosecosse/
Lovermont
Hope your trip was wonderful.
As much as I am admiring these incredible photos by Jason, regular tourist shots are good to enjoy too.
... no longer a stranger to paradise