[wildcat] Urbanity


nice nice nice.. all very nice. Wildcat, did i see the use of Silver Efex?

Thanks! Yes, like the last photo, is estimated 60% Silver Efex. Thing is, nowadays I seldom apply only one type of change or use just one tool, instead using a few types of combination of processing, with different % of visibility and/or masking.

Have learnt a lot of things from various people in the forum and kinda stagnant in learning technicals, so instead I feel I am ready to take pictures without thinking too much about technical but instead what comes to the heart (and let what I've learnt to come naturally).

I am able to visualize better what my end result should look like when I see light and I work towards that, instead of taking a photo then experimenting to find out what I can come up with.

My composition skills still suck though, and I appreciate any criticism on my photos, especially on composing.
 

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#69



Back to Esplanade
And back to more original-like
pictures with less processing
(at least minimally processed).
This was from a single pic, exposure from camera
as is, just some cropping done to balance it out,
NR to reduce noise and patching up bits of noises.
No changes to S-curve, contrast, brightness, etc.
 

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#70



Not the best lead in line. Two pics
are in here, but the second used
predominantly to brighten certain parts
of the pic only. Again, not much post
processing other than NR and brightening.

Not sure if, unlike previously, I saved with
Bicubic Smoother and made it less sharp
for this and previous pic. Could be the NR also.
 

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Hmm..... I thought a wee bit more exposure will start bringing out more details in the buildings. That would be beneficial to the B&W conversion too.
 

Hmm..... I thought a wee bit more exposure will start bringing out more details in the buildings. That would be beneficial to the B&W conversion too.

Okay, thanks! Yeah, could probably exposed more. For this, I was on the cross-road of having a nice colour, or nice building. No prizes for guessing which road I took ;p

I still have some pics with properly exposed buildings, which I will process according to details of buildings and ignore the sky/colours. Long time no see you here!

::edit:: another problem is because it's a large panorama so shrunk down, dunno if that's the cause of lost details also. Full pic here. Confused...
 

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#72


click to enlarge


Tried with brighter exposure. Size does matter.
Have to display above a certain size before the details will show.
Maybe it's my post-processing?
Anyway thanks to Kit for reminder to go back to the basics -
"details" ;)
 

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#73



At some point, I figure I have to move out of
view-from-Esplanade CBD area... but not
today. Drizzling thus entire sky was filled with
clouds, making it look cloudless actually.
 

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#73



At some point, I figure I have to move out of
view-from-Esplanade CBD area... but not
today. Drizzling thus entire sky was filled with
clouds, making it look cloudless actually.

Yup, weather not our side today.... :(
 

#73



At some point, I figure I have to move out of
view-from-Esplanade CBD area... but not
today. Drizzling thus entire sky was filled with
clouds, making it look cloudless actually.


this is nice and well expose..

love the vignet..
 

Yup, weather not our side today.... :(

Haha... actually I didn't mind the weather. But yes, I kept getting water on the filter; had to keep wiping them away. I've been waiting for opportunity to get pure white/single coloured sky for a long while! Camera was wet by that time also :sweat:

This was a snapshot I took of an innovative shooter :bsmilie: (yes that's a camera on tripod)


this is nice and well expose..

love the vignet..

Thanks.. *cough* err, vignet added in PP coz it looked too bright, and I thought it would balance out the picture.

There's something else in the picture also, more obvious than an almost invisible hill :p
 

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Haha... actually I didn't mind the weather. But yes, I kept getting water on the filter; had to keep wiping them away. I've been waiting for opportunity to get pure white/single coloured sky for a long while! Camera was wet by that time also :sweat:

This was a snapshot I took of an innovative shooter :bsmilie: (yes that's a camera on tripod)

Yah lor, i also kept wiping the droplets off my filter. Wipe till quite pek chek.. :bsmilie:

LOL~ Nice shot, and thanks for telling me cos I really can't see the camera and tripod :bsmilie:
 

Yah lor, i also kept wiping the droplets off my filter. Wipe till quite pek chek.. :bsmilie:

LOL~ Nice shot, and thanks for telling me cos I really can't see the camera and tripod :bsmilie:

Oh I kinda am hoping spot healing will be able to do something, and if not, I have a lot of multiple shots which I will merge (#73 is a merge of 3 pics) ;)
 

#74



Olympic Youth Torch
@ Marina Bay Floating Platform
 

I really like the way you viewing thing. All your photo are good. Can teach me or when you go out for shoot can I join??
 

I really like the way you viewing thing. All your photo are good. Can teach me or when you go out for shoot can I join??

Haha thanks, you're too kind. For me, a lot of things are learnt without going out.
1. Books, magazines, internet - started borrowing books, then building own collection

2. Checking out the good photos from forum and trying to learn from them how they did it. Some of the really good and helpful forumers include night86mare, Kit, J-chan, Danny Santos, to name a few when I started. Later I started stalking the APAD, then Streets and Landscape forums, expanding list of photographers to soulFLY, riotvan, Leong23, Draken413o, tungtong... a lot more people. Lately there are a group of photographers who came in later than me who are even better than me and I started stalking their photo threads too.

3. Build a group of peers to continuously improve. r00kie is my twinnie coz in my earlier days, we found out our styles are quite the same (we'd get left behind trying to keep catching up in groups, or put our tripods scarily close to edges, etc) and then went out for more outings and build up group of common friends like Kit, those in SunChasers group like NNB, ZCA, CT, etc.

4. Take your time. Don't try to learn everything at the same time. Find one shortcoming, working on it, master till you're satisfied, then move on. e.g. I first learnt to shoot to ensure my horizons are straight, then later vertically correct perspectives, then even later horizontally correct perspectives (I only did about 3 horizontally correction for photos but at least I know I can). There's tonnes of writeups in Clubsnap written by photographers like night86mare, daredevil123, Kit.

5. Don't feel shy to put up your own photos. This is where I learnt the most and other newbies who put up their photos. Have your own photos put up for critique and criticism not necessarily in Critique section - just here in Landscape, and you can see there's a lot of people offering their advise. Criticism about how bad your photos is best coz you learn most from these, but good praise also lets you know you're moving in the right direction - I don't mind giving lots of good praises but I generally reserve criticism until I'm more adept. If I have a particular criticism of a photo, I keep that to myself and if a number of people whom I trust can give good advise also think the same, then I know I'm on the right track and after a while, I find I can start giving off bit of criticism.

You need to differentiate between good advise and bad advise, not everyone telling your photo is wrong, is right, and neither is everyone telling your photo is good, is right either. But evaluate all criticism coz there's an element of truth even for bad advise.

All the best! Yeah, sure, we can go out shooting one of these days. I normally head out with r00kie (when he's not working), Kit's archi and Sun Chasers outings, other Sun Chasers like NNB looking for new shoot locations, some who stay near me like Prime and Kurniled, some non-CS friends... keep your options open ;)
 

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