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Shooting with Nikon D5100 1
2
3
4
5
[last edit 8/22/2014 11:27 PM by alexcell33 - edited 1 times]
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Nobody?!
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No 1 has nice colors ! Try to shoot straight, so you get some abstract/cool linework
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If you have photoshop or lightroom, you should do some perspective correcting.. make the verticals vertical.
"Great architecture has only two natural enemies: water and stupid men." - Richard Nickel |
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I'm super crappy at programs, so this may be useless. Straightening stuff in PS (with that 'arbitrary' rotate tool, guessing the degree?) makes me crazy. I've discovered while not-at-home that this application Fotor, which is a web based editing thinger (I've got a chromebook to work with), has the most gorgeously intuitive straightening function I've ever seen. Maybe Lightroom has something like it. Maybe I'm making things hard on myself because I don't know how to use PS very well. But if you want, this is Fotor: http://www.fotor.com/editor/index.html eta: I should mention that everything about me is crooked; mind, body, morals... photography skills (heh, "skills") are no exception. So. I was a little excited about the ease of the fix with that app. :x
[last edit 9/2/2014 3:18 AM by crows - edited 1 times]
input: bacon | output: fiction |
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Posted by yokes If you have photoshop or lightroom, you should do some perspective correcting.. make the verticals vertical.
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Word.
RIP Blackhawk |
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Im a little confused... should I just straighten the photos, or adjust the perspective like barrel distortion and stuff?
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I love the colors in 1 and 2. 5 could use a bit of straightening. The brightness on the left side of 3 distracts me from the rest of the image...I would recommend burning it down a bit to even the tonality. Overall though, they're really nice.
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The colors are awesome, but the windows seem a little whitewashed. The addition of a star filter would really make that look awesome.
It's nice to be important, but more important to be nice. |