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The Great Egret

Chris Calohan

Well-known member
To fly or not to be on wing? That is the question –Whether ‘tis nobler in the mind to suffer the stagnation of just sitting, or to take to wing and fly against a sharp wind, and by doing so, end this stillness?

2626
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
The bard would be impressed!

What a superb use of clean brilliant white!

To thing its ancestors were ugly dinosaurs!

What makes beauty happen to our eyes?

Asher
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Very pretty image.

these white birds can be a real challenge to expose properly and keep good detail. Well done.
Well said, Robert!

That level of technique is exemplary!

BTW, I have seen so many “good” wedding photographers delivering books with blown out veils or lost detail on a brocade white dress when lighting for the grooms silk collared black tux!

Not only does such white have to be well exposed, but also one cant just send these shots to Boston to the automatic wedding book printers!

Asher
 

Chris Calohan

Well-known member
However, there is a technique you can use in your raw editor by using the curve adjustment and on a parametric setting, pull the middle of the curve down a bit...sometimes, I will pull the white down then give a very small shot of white back to the curve at the top. I find this works most excellently on getting veil detail.
 
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