Cheryl told me a bit about "enhancing" pictures using the sharpness, saturation, contrast, etc. stuff on my picture download program. I have posted the before and afters; let me know what you think.
Good job! It is hard to capture what you see into a picture, those tools really help bring it out. A camera can't compete with the spectrum visible to the human eye. It's fun too, isn't it? The gladiolus picture is my favorite, very pretty.
I was just going to say I like the Gladiola picture the best in the after.... You made me remember when I lived at my parents house, I planted a bunch of those for my mom, I loved seeing them come up but they would fall over and seeing back then I wasn't much of a gardener, I just left them there laying on the ground, I should have staked them up or cut for arranging. I am going to get some for my house now, do you plant them in the fall???
The difference is really noticable - all 3 of the pictures are better when you emphasized the elements that you want with cropping, focusing and/or color saturation. You can also save pictures that come out too dark by increasing the overall "gamma" setting or by removing light from a washed out picture by lowering the "gamma" setting. Looks fine! I do it routinely to all my pictures - by cropping out the unnecessary parts, it makes the uploading/downloading go faster also. Good job, for sure!
6 comments:
Good job! It is hard to capture what you see into a picture, those tools really help bring it out. A camera can't compete with the spectrum visible to the human eye. It's fun too, isn't it?
The gladiolus picture is my favorite, very pretty.
I was just going to say I like the Gladiola picture the best in the after.... You made me remember when I lived at my parents house, I planted a bunch of those for my mom, I loved seeing them come up but they would fall over and seeing back then I wasn't much of a gardener, I just left them there laying on the ground, I should have staked them up or cut for arranging. I am going to get some for my house now, do you plant them in the fall???
The difference is really noticable - all 3 of the pictures are better when you emphasized the elements that you want with cropping, focusing and/or color saturation. You can also save pictures that come out too dark by increasing the overall "gamma" setting or by removing light from a washed out picture by lowering the "gamma" setting. Looks fine! I do it routinely to all my pictures - by cropping out the unnecessary parts, it makes the uploading/downloading go faster also. Good job, for sure!
P.S. I like the gladiolus picture the best also.
Hi - I managed to get all the way thru to the end of Shift - then got wiped out trying to pick up my "trophy" - (grin) good game!
thanks for mentioning it!!
Afters are much better. The glads are wonderful as cut flowers.
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