The following is a photograph taken on our drive from
You will have to click on the photographs to see the detail and dynamic range.
It was made with a telephoto just after sunrise. The sky was uniformly cloudy as the lifting fog burned off. Ansel Adams would have said that compromises would have to be made in the exposure since the picture ranged from really bright(zone 8) to almost pure blacks(zone 2).
The human eye is a fantastic instrument, since it can take in a scene like this and send it to the brain with all the details intact and then store it for future memory recall. Whereas the camera will struggle to capture all the detail in a single photographic exposure. Even with matrix metering, it is an average and an approximation at best. As a photographer, we take several varying exposures and hope one will be adequate.
I shoot RAW format in order to make any later adjustments in exposure.
The following photographs demonstrate different solutions to obtain a decent photograph.
Do NothingMatrix metering – Average exposure. No detail visible
Corrected in PhotoshopAdjusted curves, levels, brightness and contrast.
More detail, but not exactly as I remember.
Corrected with Photomatix Pro 3Combined 3 exposures to capture the full dynamic range,
capable of viewing on a monitor or printing.
The above photo is what it looked like to the best of my memory.
The entire scene was bathed in a golden glow.
Remember, you are looking through fog.
Note: A Photomatix generated photograph usually requires some final tweaking of levels in Photoshop.
Please leave a comment and tell me what you think. Do you use Photoshop, Photomatix and/or other
To play Sky Watch Friday visit Wiggers World.
I am posting this early, since I may not have time tonight. Have a great weekend and I look forward to seeing all of your SWF photographs.
ReplyDeleteTroy and Martha
Very beautiful, especially the third photo, which would be my choice if I had to pick one. I love the wide open spaces and your photos bring back memories of the year I spent living on the prairies many years ago.
ReplyDeleteWonderful little tutorial... if only I could get this program into my hands. My photos have never been touched by Photoshop and gosh, it would be fun to play with that program!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful photo...
Rocky Mountain Retreat
Wonderful ... all and great point about the eye vs the camera lens ... I am always trying to explain this to people who insist on shooting scenery after 3 pm .. but there's so much light .. yeah, for the EYE not for the lens...anyway .. my preference is the sepia tone .. I love sepia .. I love B&W ...
ReplyDeleteHave a great weekend!
:-Daryl
Wonderful shots. Love it!
ReplyDeleteHave a nice weekend:)
Stunning.. I can well understand why you altered it but it's the finer points of how what lose me... I have a product from Serif.com.. to do basic stuff and would proberley find photoshop very useful . Nice post for Sky Watch.. pictures anmd lesson thank you.
ReplyDeleteI have yet to try shooting RAW--I keep thinking I am going to try it. and just maybe these might spur me on! I love the sepia one best...but all are wonderful!
ReplyDeleteSometimes one misses the Kodachrome 25...
ReplyDeleteThanks for the lesson!
All the shots are nice. I just use Picasa. Somehow too much editing just doesn't seem right to me. Not that I think you did too much but I have seen some who do.
ReplyDeleteI like # 3 best.
beautiful sequence of photos with very pretty colors
ReplyDeleteBeautiful sky and what a fun lesson, too! The Golden one that you remember is amazing...
ReplyDeleteOh... my go... SO very very beautiful...
ReplyDeleteNice weekend to you. Hug from Norway.
excellent post and excellent photo work, well done.
ReplyDeleteI like the third photo best. Well done!
ReplyDeleteHi, great shots - tend to lean to the 1st, as I tend to like strong colours.
ReplyDeletePhotoshop Elements2 This I use, its an old edition tho, but enough for what I want.
Pop and see mine before I vanish haha.
Love the affects! Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteI would love to learn photoshop:)
ReplyDeleteIs it difficult?
Great idea to show what we can do:)
Petunia's SWF
Troy: I think I like your natural photo best. It shows so much character.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting post, and the final result in your photographs is gorgeous.
ReplyDeleteI don't do too much editing but if I do, I use Photoshop Elements or Microsoft Digital Image Pro if I need to correct contrast, resize, etc.
These are stunning. I very much like your first photo. The effects are subtle but effective (sorry to be repetitive!). Thanks for sharing your how-to.
ReplyDeleteThese are all beautiful photos.
ReplyDeletebeautiful sequence of photos, congratulations
ReplyDeleteVery very nice - and I appreciate your additional photos showing each phase of your processing.
ReplyDeleteGreat photos and description, Troy!
ReplyDeleteStunning and a very useful lesson.
ReplyDeleteWonderful SWF,
ReplyDeleteI love the sepia tone!!!
JU Gioli
What a great tutorial. Nice that you can get the image to the place that you originally saw it. Beautiful shot!
ReplyDeleteThanks showing the steps you took to get close to the mind's eye, Travelers. A beautiful scene well captured.
ReplyDeleteGreat shot and a great lesson.
ReplyDeleteI have to try Photoshop some time. It`s on my list of wants.
Often the originals are the best. But, it`s fun to play. ;)
My Sky Watch
yep, what Dot said. :)
ReplyDeleteGreat work. Beautiful shot.
ReplyDeleteIt's fun to see how people manipulate images. I haven't the foggiest idea of what you've actually done though. I think I need to take a course. Oh, and get Photoshop!
ReplyDeleteVery beautiful! It's amazxing what you can do with software!
ReplyDeleteTroy and Martha, your photos are astounding! I use photoshop for cropping and sharpening (very rarely) and maybe sometimes a filtering effect. I don't shoot in RAW but I can. What do I gain by shooting in RAW? Would a picture be sharper? I have a Canon A710 IS. I'd love an SLR but I'd have to learn how to use it... Thanks for showing us this... :D
ReplyDeleteGreat catch for SWF! mine's up too hope you can drop by...
ReplyDeleteBeautiful,all of them!
ReplyDeleteI know that was taken during a blazing Texas Summer.
ReplyDeleteI can feel the oppressive heat of the sun through the photo.
Thanks!
I prefer the one you use Photomatrix. The colours and definition are better than the others. I don't know this program. I use Photoshop to correct my photos and I'm still a beginner, but as I like very much to take photos I began to work with Photoshop to improve them even more. HDR is a technic that interests me but I couldn't yet develloped it. Always trying until I can do it!
ReplyDeleteAwesome photos once again Troy. What a great lesson in photography also. I don't have or use photo shop. We do have Picture Perfect but right now my use is limited to cropping, sharpening, bightening and colorboost with D-lighting once in awhile. (I don't even know what D-lighting is. I assume it means Depth but I don't know that for sure)We are still learning. Thanks once again for this lesson. I did enlarge and they are beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThat third photo is absolutely stunning! I will definitely have to look into one of those fabulous photo software packages, as I am in the market for a better digital camera. Thank you for the inspiration today and for your stunning photography!
ReplyDeleteI use photoshop to crop imgaes for panoramas, and desaturate otherwise not really. You've done a good job, but i actually prefer your non photoshop image. It's gorgeous.
ReplyDeleteTroy and Martha.. these photos are all great in their own way.. I have been playing with HDR also..still haven't gotten it "right" yet.. but you sure did... thanks for sharing
ReplyDeleteBeautiful!!!
ReplyDeleteI love the "as I remember" photo...I like them all, but as a person who also uses PS or Lightroom to "fix", "enhance" - just for the fun of the art of it - they are all gorgeous to the eye.
I left a comment and then reread your post carefully....
ReplyDeleteI use Photoshop CS3 and also Lightroom - I almost always "mess with" exposure, white balance, "curves", "hue-saturation" and depending on the photo might use the Filter: light, unsharp mask...and sometimes "burn" the edges. I also play with the blending options.
The more I use PS and Lightroom, the better my SOOC photos are as I learn about all of the camera settings and how they affect the photo.
Now, my opinion - I don't particularly care whether I set the exposure correctly when I take the photo or whether I "correct" and/or "adjust" with software after - I LOVE playing for the effect that pleases ME!!!
its really a nice one.. to learn from you there so many ways to change the captured sunset..
ReplyDeletethanks to photoshop.. hehehehe...
sooo artistic, i am still struggling of posting mine, as blogger sucks for me this past few days, they have been giving me errors and troubles and most especially a delay...
happy friday
Absolutely beautiful!!
ReplyDeleteThe photograph is beautiful, and I love how you enhanced the photo to bring out it's beauty. Karen
ReplyDeleteLovely photo!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the insight into how you achieved each one.
I'm only an amateur but use photoshop for small changes liking cropping or lightness - I'm too much of an amateur to know how to fix things.
Caught my interest immediately. Lovely composition.
ReplyDeleteWOW! Photoshop lives.
ReplyDeleteNancy
wow....this is great :D Playing with photoshop software is my favorite also :D
ReplyDeleteMine in here Thanks
The field in the golden glow looks dreamy.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. I love to play with CS3 as well, but the other software that you said, i never heard. Hmmm.....let see if i can find the info by google :D
ReplyDeleteMy SWF in here Thanks
This is a very beautiful shot. Gets the atmosphere really well in the HDR one. I still haven't got around to trying HDR, do you know if any open source/free alternatives are available to the shareware ones?
ReplyDeleteI don't own photoshop (too expensive for me!) but I use the GIMP for most of my photo editing. It has most of the same functionality as Photoshop, but is free!
Cheers,
David Webb - Nature Pictures
As Michele wrote, "wonderful little tutorial!" The variations are very interesting. "Louis" just got the new version of i-Photo which will allow some of these variations. ("Louis" doesn't have Photoshop.)
ReplyDeleteexcellent photoshop tricks!
ReplyDeleteYes, I use Photomatix pro, PS CS3, and lightroom to process most all my photos....great programs!!
ReplyDeleteCheers, Scotty
Hi Troy and Martha,
ReplyDeleteGreat compostion! And thanks for sharing your secrets. I use Photoshop CS3, which I am still learning with a lot of interest.
I am sure you will enjoy
www.worth1000.com !
very beautiful work. I use photomatix for my hdrs
ReplyDeleteI still like the original, but the one in Photoshop made the land visible, great work! The photomatix product looked fake sorry...all the same great photos! Happy weekend!
ReplyDeletewonderful and thanks for the infos!
ReplyDeleteI love the last picture, it was like a dream:)
ReplyDeleteI like the do nothing one best I think but they are all lovely to see and interesting to read about your setting changes. Sunrise is such an event. Have a great weekend and bye for now.
ReplyDeletewell done!
ReplyDeleteLovely colours!
ReplyDeleteMy Skywatch
Amazing! I am like Michele...guess if I had Photoshop I could have some fun!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful shots, lot of creativity here. Thanks for the lessons.
ReplyDeleteYour photos are fantastic, and thanks for telling us how you get such great results!
ReplyDeleteI've been "dragging my nuckles" on the whole HDR thing so far, but keep seeing interesting things being done with it. Interesting post.
ReplyDeleteWonderful picture!
ReplyDeleteI don't have any programs to touch up my photos my computer doesnt have the capacity for it. I wish I did sometimes. Have a great weekend!
Nice photo and interesting treatment. I use Photoshop only. I adjust levels, brightness and contrast. I feel like I'm still in the earlier stages of learning how to manipulate digital images. It's fun.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful HDR. I've got to figure out how to do this! Your photo is inspiring!
ReplyDeleteWow, can you come live with me and show me how to do that! I have a nice camera but am so DUMB when it comes to using it.. I love your series of photos. They are all beautiful but that last one really shows the detail.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the lesson.
These were beautiful, and the different exposures were very instructive!
ReplyDeleteI love the first shot! I tend to leave my photos un-fooled around with and prefer natural light, I seldom use flash.
ReplyDeleteI don't own any photo-editing software except what came with my Canon. I want to take some photography lessons, but then I'll need to get more cameras! Oh, the possibilities!
Fascinating how the photos took on a life of their own, one after another. Nice work. I have Photoshop, abbreviated version, and find it to be just that. :O)Hope your holiday weekend is great!
ReplyDeleteThis was cool. Thanks for doing it.
ReplyDeleteTotally surreal - the last one is my favorite...I think.
ReplyDeleteI loved the photomatix shot. I could just feel the sun radiating from that photo. Lovely!
ReplyDeleteI love them all esp. the 3 exposures.
ReplyDeleteI've never seen Photomatix before. I like how your third shot turned out. I would have used Photoshop for a similar effect.
ReplyDelete