STATUS QUOtes — Picture Quote — 20180222

Today’s Picture Quote


“I love you – I am rest with you – I have come home.” – Dorothy Savers

Via

 
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STATUS QUOtes — 20180222

Today’s STATUS QUOtes

 

“Most people don’t actually think. They just take their first thought and go.” — Unknown

“It’s not too late for you to be a genius. It comes at a price, but it’s not based on your DNA.” — Seth Godin

“I don’t believe in aging. I believe in forever altering one’s aspect to the sun.” — Virginia Woolf

“Baby: A loud noise at one end and no sense of responsibility at the other.” — Ronald Knox

 
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Photography: What is Post-Processing?

When it comes to photography, I consider myself a journeyman or apprentice. I work alone with the Internet serving as my mentor and it has provided great benefits to me as a student of photographic skills. I have always been interested in photography and back in the days of “only film,” I had a black and white darkroom.

Nowadays, digital photography makes things easier; at least for me. Post-processing is chemical free and done on a computer where mistakes can often be easily corrected with a few key strokes. If you are new to photography, you might be wondering: “What is post-processing?” Let me try to give you a simple explanation as I understand it.

When a digital photograph is taken on an automatic setting, the camera, which is really a computerized device, gathers all the information about the scene such as how dark it is, what colors go where, what area should be in focus, etc. and then it interprets the data and converts into a digital image. The current camera models are really quite capable and most will produce good to very good results on automatic settings.

There are times however when the camera may become “confused” because the scene is more difficult to analyze. A picture with lots of snow or many dark areas or one with high contrast will often cause problems. With many cameras, the settings can be changed from automatic to compensate for these difficult situations if the user is skilled enough to adjust the settings manually.

There will invariably be times, however, when a picture is less than ideal. Perhaps the photographer made an error in one of the settings. Some times a dial or setting is changed unintentionally and the error is not noticed until several shots later. The good news is that many mistakes can be remedied after the fact, i.e. post-processing.

In order to have the most options to re-work or revise photographs, some formats are better than others for allowing the photographer to compensate for mistakes such as underexposure or faulty composition. The most common form that offers leeway is the RAW image format, but what I am writing about below applies to almost every format including JPEG, PNG and others as well. It is just that RAW offers more latitude than some and is most common so there are many programs to help correct a picture via appropriate software.

In the RAW format, the camera caputers all the data, but doesn’t put it together for the user as it would in automatic mode. The camera offers the user the opportunity to make most of the decisions about how the photograph is to look. It is as though the camera is communicating with the user and saying: “OK, I know there is red in the scene and I know where it goes, but what is the exact hue of red that you want and what should the saturation and vibrance be?” The user can then use software to manipulate the camera’s information to create the scene as they saw it when the shutter was pressed.

The photograph below, for example, was taken at the Tucson Botanical Garden. When I put the image on my computer to view, it was lacking much of the “punch” and interest that encouraged me to take it in the first place.



I didn’t realize it at the time, but there are too many distracting elements in the photograph. The eye is being pulled away from the main group of the yellow daisy-like flowers by the bits of colors in the pansies on the right.

The upper left also has some distracting plant material. My intent was to have viewers focus on the yellow cluster of flowers. Cropping (cutting off) some elements of the picture will help a bit. In the edit below, I removed as much of the pansies (right-side) as possible without cutting off any of the pretty yellow petals.



Once that was done, I used tools in Lightroom and Photoshop to darken the areas around the plant that were distracting. Making the corners and other areas darker helps to lead the eye directly to the flowers. I also enhanced the color to more closely represent the flowers as I remembered them. I tried to be careful to avoid removing the shadows which add an element of interest to the picture. I like the shades of yellow as they are altered by the varying intensities of the light.



I was relatively happy with the result at this point, but I didn’t like the flower on the extreme left. It was on the wane and seemed to be drawing attention away from the main grouping of four. Experts suggest using odd numbers of objects in a photograph as they most often produce a pleasing result, but I wasn’t sure about this specific image.

I decided to remove the flower on the left to see how that looked.



I like the edited picture above the best. What do you think? When you compare the original image to the final image, I think you will agree that post-processing, i..e. modifying the image after it has been taken, has created a more pleasing and artistic picture.

To quote one of America’s most famous photographers, Ansel Adams, “I don’t take photographs I make photographs.” This is what I try to do. I am an average user of post-processing software, but I continue to learn and enjoy making images. It is much fun and offers the photographer a chance to become a photographic artist.

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Metadata

File Name: yellow_flowers_0507-2.CR2
Capture time: 12:21:36 PM
Capture date: April 11, 2014
Exposure: 1/500 sec @ f/8.0
Focal Length: 17.14mm
ISO: 125
Camera: Canon PowerShot SX50 HS
Lens: 4.3-215mm

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©Jeffrey B. Ross – 2018 – JBRish.com



STATUS QUOtes — 20180221

Today’s STATUS QUOtes

 

“You’re always with yourself, so you might as well enjoy the company.” — Diane Von Furstenberg

“I don’t understand it any more than you do, but one thing I’ve learned is that you don’t have to understand things for them to be.” — Madeline L’Engle

“I am careful not to confuse excellence with perfection. Excellence, I can reach for; perfection is God’s business.” — Michael J. Fox

“A truly reckless driver is one who passes you when you are already exceeding the speed limit.” — Unknown

 
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STATUS QUOtes — 20180220

Today’s STATUS QUOtes

 

“When people are lame, they love to blame.” — Robert Kiyosaki

“Everything in the world began with a yes. One molecule said yes to another molecule and life was born.” — Clarice Lispector

“You can hide memories, but you can’t erase the history that produced them.” — Haruki Murakami

“I don’t understand this whole Elvis thing. There are dead people in my family that we miss and love dearly, but shoot, we don’t dress up like them and do impressions.” — Wanda Sykes

 
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STATUS QUOtes — Picture Quote — 20180219

Today’s Picture Quote


“Choose your battles wisely because if you fight them all you’ll be too tired to win the really important ones.”

Via

 
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STATUS QUOtes — 20180219

Today’s STATUS QUOtes

 

“O, for a horse with wings!” — William Shakespeare

“The reading of all good books is like a conversation with the finest minds of past centuries.” — Rene Descartes

“No man’s error becomes his own Law; nor obliges him to persist in it.” — Thomas Hobbes

“A good film is when the price of the dinner, the theatre admission and the babysitter were worth it.” — Alfred Hitchcock

 
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Amazing Picture of Cyclist’s Leg Veins

Many of us have probably had the experience of having blood drawn and having the technician ask us to make a fist. What does making a fist actually do? If you make a fist, it increases the prominence of the vein.

If pumping a fist does that, what can we assume happens to the legs of a cyclist in race such as the Tour de France?


Veins popping in the legs of a Tour de France cyclist.

Photo credit Via

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STATUS QUOtes — 20180218

Today’s STATUS QUOtes

 

“Love is love, but marriage is an investment.” — Erica Jong

“The hardest job for a politician today is to have the courage to be a moderate. It’s easy to take an extreme position.” — Hubert Humphrey

“Build a dream and the dream will build you.” — Dr. Robert Schuller

“No man is an island, but some of us are pretty long peninsulas.” — Ashleigh Brilliant

 
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©Jeffrey B. Ross – 2018 — JBRish.com


STATUS QUOtes — 20180217

Today’s STATUS QUOtes

 

“Don’t expect to get what you give. Not everyone has a heart like you.” — Unknown

“Anxiety might be contagious, but confidence is also contagious” — Henry Marsh, Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery

“Removing the faults in a stage-coach may produce a perfect stage-coach, but it is unlikely to produce the first motor car.” — Edward De Bono

“Cut out all these exclamation points. An exclamation point is like laughing at your own joke.” — F. Scott Fitzgerald

 
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All original content on this blog is copyrighted by Jeffrey B. Ross with ALL Rights Reserved. While reference links back to JBRish.com are appreciated and encouraged, please acquire approval for any reproduction of original content from this website.

©Jeffrey B. Ross – 2018 — JBRish.com