Cem_Usakligil
Well-known member
Went to the beach this afternoon.
Cheers,




Cheers,
...Stupid question, was it long exposure or mist? (as there is no waves, I'm not sure)
Yes indeed, these are long exposure shots. It is something I have tried for the first time today. I have accompanied a photographer friend to the beach, who is specialized in long exposure B&W photography. He was kind enough to lend me an ND110 (x10 stops) filter so I that could have a go at it myself...C'mon now, you have to give up a little of the PP info.
How else are we supposed to learn?![]()
I have done some dodging on some of the pillars but no burning. D&B was done mostly to lighten the foamy areas of the water and to darken the sky and the foreground sand as well as some areas in the water to create a bit of a contrast.the D&B were for the vignetting or did you burned the pillars as well?
Went to the beach this afternoon.
Cheers,
Wow Cem,
You really are 'back' aren't you.
Lovely series, your technical abilities are without question but your great strength is that you just have a bloody good eye.
Each of these carries what I'd call geometric tension.
I think know exactly what Asher is referring to with the whole 'sailing close to the winds of kitsch' thing but fear not, you're shooting with the breeze.
Naturally, I have decided to reprocess the images again in order to see how I could make them emotionally mine again. The resulting pictures can be seen below. It won't be a surprise that I now come up with color pictures instead of b&w. I have converted the new versions also to b&w and they are as good as the color versions. In order to decide, I have printed the pictures at A3+ size both (in color and b&w) and took a very long look at them. In the end, my slight preference was for the color versions. But I would be perfectly happy with the b&w as well. Sigh. ;-)
Hi Cem
The color versions are wonderful!
So dramatically different from the black and white versions.
Each version stands so well on their own.
A testament to your talent.
Very nice series, both the color and BW versions.
The step after that might be trying out the triptych idea with 3x 40x60 prints.
Thank you so much for giving me a lot of credit, possibly more than I deserve. But I appreciate it nevertheless..First I'm glad that you have been shaking the uneasy feeling of emulating someone else's work or style, and second because the color versions are so much you. Composition and technical execution is flawless, the result is mesmerizingly beautiful to watch and to dwell on.
Although I haven't seen the B/W versions of your final conversions, I can't imagine that they are as strong as the color ones. In my view, B/W is only needed if the colors do not contribute to the overall composition. Here the colors do, especially the way you chose to colorbalance the supposedly overly warm rendition of the 10 stop ND filter. You probably rendered the background a little cooler, more blue, than it actually was, thus creating a more distant color for the background and consequently creating a more grabbing emphasis on the foreground (which is 'mystifyingly' blurred, yet razor sharp at the same time).
Very well done, even if you don't make it into a "signature style". These works have your signature written all over, don't worry!
Thanks for the tip!I find them nice to work with:
http://www.hahnemuehle.com/prod/en/216/152/gallerie-wrap-professional.html
After that, the stamped new layer sharpened using focus magic's deconvolution sharpener to regain the sharpness lost due to diffraction (f16). Of course, the layer was set to luminosity blending and the blend-if sliders were used to prevent any sharpening halos.
And finally, the resulting tif was processed in LR3 to add two very slight graduated ND filters at the top and at the bottom of the picture to enhance the feeling of depth towards the horizon.
The only problem I am aware of is the fact that there is no 64-bit version available so one has to switch from ps x64 version to ps x32 version to sharpen and then back....I had heard there was a problem with that filter. Was that the case? Is this a new version?
....How is this better than Photoshop filters?
The only problem I am aware of is the fact that there is no 64-bit version available so one has to switch from ps x64 version to ps x32 version to sharpen and then back.
The reason I have applied the gradual ND filters as the last step in LR3 is not because it is better (or worse) than doing it in photoshop. LR3 is a parametric editing application (just stating the obvious) and it is easier to change the strength of the effect or to remove it later
That's correct, and it doesn't run on all Mac OS versions. There hasn't been any development of the FocusMagic plugin for years, but when it works, it works very well.
A new deconvolution sharpening contender is In-focus from Topaz Labs, but it's first version has some shortcomings (which are being addressed by the developers). When used for capture sharpening, it is almost as effective as Focusmagic.
Cheers,
Bart
That's correct, and it doesn't run on all Mac OS versions. There hasn't been any development of the FocusMagic plugin for years, but when it works, it works very well.
A new deconvolution sharpening contender is In-focus from Topaz Labs, but it's first version has some shortcomings (which are being addressed by the developers). When used for capture sharpening, it is almost as effective as Focusmagic.
Cheers,
Bart
I too have both programs. FM is still my main sharpening tool; I know rather well how it works and when it fails. In-focus is something I have yet to learn to trust. Sometimes it delivers inconsistent or inferior results, especially when the estimate function is used. Hopefully things will improve with the future releases, which unfortunately cannot be said about FM.+1 Since FM is essentially a program on the brink of extinction, I have InFocus since 48 hours, and contacted them with some suggestions. It has a lot of potential in my view, but also some very darn simple shortcomings that can be fixed easily, other things are not so easy, and one can only hope they put more brains into it for future releases.
Don't you just love those moments of joyful discovery? So much to learn, so little time!On a funny side note, I caused a jaw dropper a few days ago. Sitting here with a friend who also uses LR since it's incarnation, he all of the sudden jumped from his chair and shouted STOP! We were talking about photography while I was re processing some older pictures to see what modern software can do with them, and I was applying a colored grad in LR when he literally jumped. That you can sample a color from your picture with the color picker instead of using the color mixer to apply a Grad was not known to him.
I asked him to give me a warning next time before he jumps.
Hehehe!
Thanks for the insightful thoughts. You are correct that part of my unease was caused by the worry that I was doing this as a gimmick to appeal to the taste of masses. As you wrote, furniture stores (even the huge Swedish ones) are filled with some 1-3m wide canvas prints of similar vistas in bw or sepia; just for yours for less than 100 Euro to hang on your living room walls. Unless that wall space is already taken up by one's own wedding pictures or the pictures of their kids/pets printed large on -you've guessed it- canvas! lol...
since you posted in this specific section here, one word on Kitsch shall be allowed in context. I had to reflect on this for a while because coincidently, I saw the first picture of your series recently in a furniture shop in N- Ireland, approx. 32 inch wide on super cheap canvas selling for Euro 45, of course, made in China, no photographer mentioned. The scene was nearly the same, and it was also processed b&w.
Naturally, I laughed out loud when I saw your post a few days later. - Not laughing at you that is! -
The art history of Kitsch is fascinating and people like Adorno wrote about it. It goes back as early as the mid 19th century, but only by mid 20th century it was used to depict lifestyle and objects of the industrial revolution, hence mass production, hence mass culture.
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I conclude, as photographic artists, in a world where nothing has not been photographed before, it is inevitable that some of our work will at the same time have an equivalent in the Kitsch department already. - May be this was making you feel uneasy? Perhaps you have seen similar before many years ago, and just did not remember it in context. Just a wild guess! -
The main difference between your photograph and Kitsch is not only the lovely execution and detail of work and thought that went undoubtedly into it, but also that it is not printed somewhere in Spain 5,00.000 times and sold for Euro 3,99 in Tourist outlets.
So from both perspectives, were it Kitsch you produced, it would also belong in this Art section ....
Well, if you could morph the can of beans as if it is melting and add an elephant on tall legs of a bird to one side, we may be talking about something really interesting.Ahem...
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