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Peace Valley

This is a discussion on Peace Valley within the Critiques forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; I went for a drive on the weekend, and got lost in the valley. Thank goodness I did, because I ...

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    kiley9806 is offline Senior Member
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    Default Peace Valley

    I went for a drive on the weekend, and got lost in the valley. Thank goodness I did, because I found myself on a very beautiful road, heading towards the river. Here are just a couple photos I took of the valley hills. I upped the detail and saturation a tiny bit on both in post-processing, and removed a few telephone poles along the horizon.
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    I like the photos but both seem to lack sharpness. Also I would have (not that it matters what I would have done lol) but on the first photo the road would have been more central to the photo. You have the info from the photos? The second photo might look good also as a B&W, it may not but worth playing with. I hope you don't mind but I did a quick what I think fix to one, I am sure much more can be done, this was a very quick change. Also I should have asked before I did anything to your photo, very sorry and will ask before I do it again.


    Last edited by AcadieLibre; 05-05-2008 at 11:33 AM.
    “I take photographs with love, so I try to make them art objects. But I make them for myself first and foremost - that is important.” Jacques-Henri Lartigue

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    kiley9806 is offline Senior Member
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    youre, right - i shouldve gotten more out into the middle of the road to take a shot with it directly in the centre as well. thats a good excuse to go get lost on that road again!

    since its just barely spring here - practically no color or new growth at all, the scene was naturally very brown. in your edit, it seems too over processed for my eye. maybe just because i was able to view the picture in real life too. and the hills are very gentle and rolling, so i was kind of trying to keep that in mind with the softness of the picture. maybe its not the best outcome though.

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    kiley9806 is offline Senior Member
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    the picture info is as follows:

    shot 1 with road -
    exposure time 1/1000 second
    F/7.1
    ISO 200

    shot 2 of hills -
    1/800
    F/8.0
    ISO 200

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    Quote Originally Posted by AcadieLibre
    I like the photos but both seem to lack sharpness. Also I would have (not that it matters what I would have done lol) but on the first photo the road would have been more central to the photo. You have the info from the photos? The second photo might look good also as a B&W, it may not but worth playing with.
    I'd agree with the lack of sharpness issue, there doesn't seem to be a clear focus in either shot. But, that said, sure doesn't look like a place I'd mind getting lost.

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    Just a suggestion, to get a more clear shot your Aperture should be 9 to 11. I personally would go with a smaller aperture if I could, I think that would make your shots much clearer. If your shutter speed is that fast your aperture I think is far to open. Others might correct me on this but your aperture should be a fall smaller opening than your using. In daylight I shoot a smaller aperture of f/12 to f/16. No reason to be shooting that high of shutter speed. I try and keep my aperture as small as possible, the wider the less detail you get in your photos. My edit was just to show you can bring out the colours and get more clarity with some work. That was a 2 second edit just to show you what is possible with what you have, I would spend some time in post processing and clean the image up a bit.
    “I take photographs with love, so I try to make them art objects. But I make them for myself first and foremost - that is important.” Jacques-Henri Lartigue

    "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke

    "Vive L'Acadie, Liberté, égalité, fraternité, ou la mort!"




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    tegan is offline Senior Member
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    You have the diagonals and the two thirds foreground and texture and layers which makes good composition in a landscape but what you are missing is a strong centre of interest which draws the eye and makes the photo complete.

    Tegan

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    Travis is offline Senior Member
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    Quote Originally Posted by AcadieLibre
    Just a suggestion, to get a more clear shot your Aperture should be 9 to 11. I personally would go with a smaller aperture if I could, I think that would make your shots much clearer. If your shutter speed is that fast your aperture I think is far to open. Others might correct me on this but your aperture should be a fall smaller opening than your using. In daylight I shoot a smaller aperture of f/12 to f/16. No reason to be shooting that high of shutter speed. I try and keep my aperture as small as possible, the wider the less detail you get in your photos. My edit was just to show you can bring out the colours and get more clarity with some work. That was a 2 second edit just to show you what is possible with what you have, I would spend some time in post processing and clean the image up a bit.
    +1 on f9 - 11

    I kinda like Acadie's remix of the shot... it kinda spices up the rather flat image by making it look like a painting...

    I know you are driving and taking pictures as you go along... but shooting these scapes in the first and last couple of hours in the morning/even sun will afford you much richer tones.... i have learned this being up every few hours with my infant son
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    Travis is offline Senior Member
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    btw... i hear ya on the everything is brown front.... things are like that as well in Muskoka...
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    kiley9806 is offline Senior Member
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    thank you all for the comments and critiques...

    sadly, my dinky little h5 has a max ap of 8.0. once i upgrade, i will take a trip to get more landscape shots for sure!

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