View Full Version : Four o'clock high
malechi
10-26-2009, 06:29 PM
One of my most favorite shots. Thoughts?
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3529/3991755820_a5baed2d25_o.jpg
Bambi
10-26-2009, 07:24 PM
I quite like this shot and can see why it's one of your favorites. I love the clouds, texture of the grass and the sharpness of the tree. the bird is a great addition. the contrast is good too and I like the rays of the sun. I have not made up my mind about the blown out sky part. i wish it wasn't quite so large but it also adds to the whole sunburst effect.
overall nice work!
Mad Aussie
10-26-2009, 07:59 PM
Yep cool shot. The blown out area is a bit big ... but ... in this case it kinda of works as it's totally part of the scene/story.
tirediron
10-26-2009, 10:04 PM
Nice image, agree that the blown area is a bit large. A graduated ND would have really taken this image to the next level.
I like it. I think the blown out area works. Its kind of biblical, with the tree and the bird.
malechi
10-27-2009, 07:20 AM
Thanks all. I don't mind the blown out area at all. I didnt have time to install a graduated ND filter. I did it in post.
Iguanasan
10-27-2009, 07:20 AM
What they said! :)
Seriously, nice capture. I'd be very happy with that photo. I don't see anything particularly wrong with it.
Marko
10-27-2009, 09:17 AM
Thanks all. I don't mind the blown out area at all. I didnt have time to install a graduated ND filter. I did it in post.
I'll be the odd man out here, blown out sky is a blown out sky. You have detail on the edge which is saving this shot somewhat, not totally though. Just as an FYI - you cannot use a ND grad filter in post to save a blown sky. Only proper exposure will save you and that cannot be done easily in post production. Hope that helps - Marko
malechi
10-27-2009, 09:24 AM
I'll be the odd man out here, blown out sky is a blown out sky. You have detail on the edge which is saving this shot somewhat. Just as an FYI - you cannot use a ND grad filter in post to save a blown sky. Only proper exposure will save you and that cannot be done easily in post production. Hope that helps - Marko
Marko:
I appreciate the Critique. Yes, the sky is blown out and I can't get that back in post. If I didn't shoot immediately, I would have missed the bird. Shot in Aperture priority. Just a question, what would you have metered off of for this shot? To me personally, I know the sun was right there so I would expect that to be blown out. I didn't have a ND filter or any filter. I just had my D300s and a 50mm lens. How could I not blow out the sun and still have detail in the foreground?
jlabel
10-27-2009, 09:34 AM
Very nice picture. I think you can crop the border a bit to get a bigger tree
Mad Aussie
10-27-2009, 03:02 PM
How could I not blow out the sun and still have detail in the foreground?
Without resorting to HDR ... nothing really. You could meter off some spot that was very bright but not bright enough to kill all dark detail and then recover some of that in post later but it's always going to be a compromise. And without something like a ND Grad (and even then perhaps) there was always going to be a blown out section of sky in this photo I think.
malechi
10-27-2009, 08:14 PM
I think the blown out sky adds to the image. Give it a biblical feel to me. No the photo is not technically correct but I really had no time to think about that. I saw the bird perched in the tree and new he was going to fly very quickly and as he did, I shot. Sometimes that split second is all you get.
Marko
10-28-2009, 11:16 AM
I appreciate the Critique. Yes, the sky is blown out and I can't get that back in post. If I didn't shoot immediately, I would have missed the bird. Shot in Aperture priority. Just a question, what would you have metered off of for this shot? To me personally, I know the sun was right there so I would expect that to be blown out. I didn't have a ND filter or any filter. I just had my D300s and a 50mm lens. How could I not blow out the sun and still have detail in the foreground?
Ma is right there was nothing you could have done to have detail in both sun and foreground without HDR. And don't get me wrong....I still like this shot.
If this were mine, I would have probably underexposed the sky at the time of exposure. I likely would have used the camera recommended exposure and used exposure compensation (on the negative side) if needed. That would have made the foreground darker, but for me most of the interest is not in the foreground anyway.
I think if you burn the top left edge and the left edge, the blown out sky will be less distracting. Hope that helps - Marko
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