Anthony Lee
Senior Member
Anthony, digital is not film. Digital output from DSLRs is made to be malleable, whereas for film, e.g. Velvia, a heavy amount of saturation is inherent, etc.
Your photos are currently still looking very washed out with a very flat look, even Auto Levels will help a bit with that. I know a lot of people have issues with "post processing" and all that, but photography is essentially about the vision, not about how little or how much you did in post.![]()
Appreciate your input. I am a very lousy PP guy and just began learning CS5. Tami is a white cat with some light ginger color on her face. The only thing outstanding about her is her eyes. The photo was taken with her against a very light grey background and white floor. I shot at f1.4 and this A 50f1.4 has very poor contrast at f1.4. At CS5 camera raw, I pushed the contrast level to the limit and add some degree of fill black, tone down the white clipping and fill some light to her face. So, except her little shade of ginger and her eyes, the photo was practically about white and light grey. I really do not know what else I could have done except to shoot at f2.8 instead of f1.4. I processed the photo in camera raw in prophoto RGB and convert to jpec in sRGB. At CS5 photoshop, I then cropped the photo to remove all the flat area because there was nothing except the light grey wall, and then gave it a 30% smart sharpening. Please let me know what else I can do to this photo to improve on it and I will greatly appreciate.