Kenneth67C
New Member
Before
After

After

Before
![]()
After
![]()
Why not?
Before
![]()
After
![]()
edutilos- said:Before:
After:
Before #1
http://i1087.photobucket.com/albums/j463/rulergod/before002changi.jpg[img]
Before #2
[img]http://i1087.photobucket.com/albums/j463/rulergod/changibefore001.jpg[img]
Add together =
[img]http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6165/6175506494_532f70b75d_o.jpg
can you give a rough outline on how you did this :heart: this picture is amazing :thumbsup:
There are another 2 more images but due to the forum limit to 5 images per post. So only selected 4 were shown.
Ah, I always wondered how you did this one. You also did selective correction of the color on the ground, did you not? It's a good choice which makes the image click together better.
My preference is to actually use images 1, 3 and 4. I'm not sure how image 2 actually contributes. Keep the sky of 1 to darken it a bit - perhaps 30% opacity, then use the muddy ground of 3 and the grass of 4. That should add together nicely.
P.S. Did you multiply the fog quite a bit? I have always wondered, but image 4 shows clearly an absence of fog below the horizon, and none in front of the tree. This is not the case for the final output.
Image no. 2 actually gives the micro-contrast to the sky and ground (the muddy track) actually... Yeah some people actually asked how it kinda plays in the picture but prior to that image it will look bland due to the amount of layers DRIed (LOL, "dried") it will tend to loose a bit of contrast when layered together in PP.
I increased the highlights a bit that caused this, and was tone mapped a little... And again I used another image that wasn't uploaded and shown here... Well and I like how it highlights the tree in front as that was my intended purpose.
The resultant photo is then corrected for lens distortion, horizon problems, cropped. For this case the pier things in the background behind the rock were way too irritating, so I cloned them out. Color balance adjustments, some minor highlight/shadow recovery using the Photoshop tool, selective saturation of the sky more than the water, sharpening... Standard stuff.
When you get to this part - lens distortion, horizon problems, cropped, do you flatten the layers to work on the adjusted image?
Is there a way to still keep the layers if you need to go back and do further adjustments to the previous layers?
Thanks
Before #1
![]()
Before #2
![]()
Add together =
![]()