Friday, May 16, 2008

When is enough enough?

I never know when to finish with the post processing of an image and when to just call it a day step back from Photoshop or GIMP or any of the other tools I've used recently.

Here's a good example.

(F/4, 1/200sec, 70mm, ISO-400, 03/05/2008)

 

This shot has been pushed through the Photoshop mill a reasonable amount. Curves, a slight cooling filter and a few other tweaks have been applied to make give it a bit more life. The original isn't worth posting, it's very dull and lifeless (to be honest I wouldn't even have looked twice at this if it wasn't for my weird emotional connection to this boat).

Now, I quite liked this shot and figured it was as close to OK as I could make it...

 

Then I loaded it into Dynamic Photo-HDR (the tool I use for all my HDR shots) and ended up with this.

 

So, here's the thing. Was it a step too far?

 

I like the water, I like the colours. I know it breaks my own opinion on HDR needing to look 'real' to look 'good', but apart from that I'm damned if I can decide which I prefer.

 

Maybe they both suck.

Post Date: Friday, May 16, 2008 8:51:40 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Disclaimer | Comments [2] |    # Related posts:
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Sunday, May 18, 2008 12:25:51 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I prefer the first one, it's darker and you love dark moody pictures.....
Tuesday, May 20, 2008 12:24:59 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I prefer the first one.

The second one looks like it has a pale purple 'wash' over it all, and the water is fussy and distracting. The patch of land in the top right is a little distracting too.

The first one minimises these distractions and has no overall 'wash'.

On the other hand, the first one seems too dark to me, and given the direction of the boat I'm curious where it's headed. I know it's tied up, but it looks like it's leading the eye to something just outside the image on the right, but we're frustrated because we can't see what it is. The ropes also lead my eyes in and out of the picture, but they're frustrated too - there's no 'resolution' the way chord progressions 'resolve' in music.
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