Photograph By Richard Parco
Richard P.
Photograph By Jan Symank
Jan S.
Photograph By Michele Beccia
Michele B.
Photograph By Jan Symank
Jan S.
Photograph By Art McCaffrey
Art M.
Photograph By Leila Eamen
Leila E.
Photograph By The Pilgrim
The P.
Photograph By Andre Denis
Andre D.
 
imageopolis Home Sign Up Now! | Log In | Help  

Your photo sharing community!

Your Photo Art Is Not Just A Fleeting Moment In Social Media
imageopolis is dedicated to the art and craft of photography!

Upload
your photos.  Award recipients are chosen daily.


Editors Choice Award  Staff Choice Award  Featured Photo Award   Featured Critique Award  Featured Donor Award  Best in Project Award  Featured Photographer Award  Photojournalism Award

Imageopolis Photo Gallery Store
Click above to buy imageopolis
art for your home or office
.
 
  Find a Photographer. Enter name here.
    
Share On
Follow Us on facebook 

 


Send this photo as a postcard
Boulder
 
Send this image as a postcard
  
Image Title:  Boulder
  0
Favorites: 0 
 By: Kurt Pas  
  Copyright ©2003

Register or log in to view this image at its full size, to comment and to rate it.


This photo has won the following Awards




 Projects & Categories

 Browse Images
  Recent Pictures
  Todays Pictures
  Yesterdays Pictures
  Summary Mode
  All imageopolis Pictures
 
 Award Winners
  Staff Choice
  Editors Choice
  Featured Donors
  Featured Photographers
  Featured Photos
  Featured Critiques
   
 Image Options
  Unrated Images
  Critique Only Images
  Critiquer's Corner
  Images With No Critiques
  Random Images
  Panoramic Images
  Images By Country
  Images By Camera
  Images By Lens
  Images By Film/Media
   
 Categories
   
 Projects
   
 Find Member
Name
User ID
 
 Image ID
ID#
 
   
 Search By Title
 
   

Photographer  Kurt Pas {Karma:2267}
Project #38 Photo Help Camera Model Nikon F60
Categories Landscape
Film Format
Portfolio Nature - Landscape - Wildlife
Lens Tamron 28-200
Uploaded 12/19/2003 Film / Memory Type Fuji  Superia
    ISO / Film Speed 800
Views 725 Shutter 1/125
Favorites Aperture f/11
Critiques 13 Rating
6.01
/ 7 Ratings
Location City -  Near Corté
State -  CORSICA - ISLAND
Country - France   France
About Hi,

Original I was very satisfied with the composition and exposure of this slide.
When I scanned the slide, the color saturation was gone and it came out to bright. PS can't solve this all.
Any suggestions on scanner settings? Thanks for viewing!!! All comments highly appreciated!
Random Pictures By:
Kurt
Pas


Lake Cheese

~Sammeke~

Fontainebleau - 1

On Stage fiesta!!!

Typical Belgium Politics! Part II

Boulder

Chica 1

Fina Refinary

Shantou University's Arts Troupe

the colors of my garden

There are 13 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
Kurt Pas   {K:2267} 1/5/2004
Brent,

Thanks for the comment. I defenately have to start learning PS!
Nice to hear you?re a climber too.

  0


Brent Mills   {K:730} 1/4/2004
Kurt, this is definitely fixable in PS. It just needs a few adjustments. I spent about 10 mins on this one and got the result below. I made a duplicate layer and adjusted it (using curves) so that the sky was what I wanted (coincidentally the boulder itself came out pretty well inthis layer also). then I adjusted the base layer so that the grass and weeds were correct. Then I used a mask on the sky and boulder alyer in order to merge the two properly. After flattening this layer, I used a hue/saturation adjustment layer to fix the saturation problems. This only left problems with the boulder. IT was still blueish in tint and slightly burned out. So I flattened these layers and made a new color balance adjustment layer. I simply I adjusted the highlights and the shadows on the cyan/red slider so that they were closer to the red side to prefect the color (I used this more on highlights than shadows). That gave me the image that I included here. Hope this helps! Great shot originally. Being a mountain climber I especially love it. It reminds me of being on the mountains again. Nice capture.
-Brent

  0



Paolo Barthelemy   {K:25552} 12/22/2003
I agree with Hermen about the solution and I agree with you about the composition: it's very well done and the shot has a very nice perspective. Furthermore, you may try to take this shot during late afternoon when lighting is softer and colors are warmer.

My best regards and greetings, Paolo

P.S. Many thanks for you kind and useful comment.

  0


Robert Gaither Robert Gaither   {K:34128} 12/20/2003
Not sure on scanner make it as big as resolution it can get they say? You can work with it in ps in channels its a lot of work through. Maybe a better scanner or scanning from film or negatives. Drum scanners are the best from what I've read. Maybe just invest in a digital camera for Christmas for they have come down in price.

  0


Hermen Pen Hermen Pen   {K:9168} 12/19/2003
I would change the settings in such a way that the scan comes out darker.
(Not sure how that can be done with your scanner / software, with my Minolta this is fairly easy to achieve though). If, with the new settings, some parts come out too dark, you can lighten them up with the 'dodge' tool in Photoshop/Photoimpact, etc. Note that lighting underexposed parts (dodging) works much better than darkening overexposed parts (burning). The dodged parts may be a bit more noisy but stil contain detail. The burnt parts will not get detail back, it simply is not in the scan anymore due to the overexposure. Good luck!

  0


Chris Lauritzen   {K:14949} 12/19/2003
Sorry I ment to add also that I did use Photoshop 7.

  0


Chris Lauritzen   {K:14949} 12/19/2003
Kurt,

I have used that scanner in the past and never really had any good luck with it then it finally died on me. You might want to download Vuescan (www.hamrick.com) which is decent scanner software that can help get the best out of a scanner. You might also want to consider selling that scanner and getting a better one (Canon, Minolta, Nikon?). Your scans will look tons better without having to do a lot of adjustments after the scan.

As far as what I did here, I first did an overall levels adjustment, I made sure the highlights and darkness pointers where at first peaks. Then I adjusted the middle slider (midrange) to find a good balance. I then masked off the sky and burned it in a bit to darken it. I then lighten only the foreground rock to help pull the details out.

Then I opened the saved image in Neat Image to clean up the noise in the sky and smooth out the details of the rocks.

As an added note, when shoot something like this you might want to watch the exposure as the brightness on the rock in the foreground can cause the camera to underexpose this. I don?t think that happened here but it?s something to watch out for.

  0


Kurt Pas   {K:2267} 12/19/2003
Just phoned my dad,

It is a "PrimeFilm 1800u" film scanner. We used the soft delivered by the scanner. I do not know the settings anymore. But I have not much technical background in analog or digital photography. So it is difficult to hunt for the correct settings.

Nice fix. Did you use PS? What settings?

Thanks a lot.

  0


Anouschka Rokebrand   {K:6470} 12/19/2003
Apart from the brightness, I think you have a very nice image here. Interesting composition.

Anouschka

  0


Chris Lauritzen   {K:14949} 12/19/2003
Kurt,

What scanner and software combo are you using?

Here is a fix that I tried...

  0



Jose Ignacio (Nacho) Garcia Barcia Jose Ignacio (Nacho) Garcia Barcia   {K:96391} 12/19/2003
stunning tones.

  0


Munzir Khan   {K:8} 12/19/2003
nice colors, accurate brightness and just awesome!!!
good work Kurt Pas

  0


Teunis Haveman Teunis Haveman   {K:53426} 12/19/2003
Kurt, great work
Beautiful
Teunis

  0


  1

 

|  FAQ  |  Terms of Service  |  Donate  |  Site Map  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise  |

Copyright ©2013 Absolute Internet, Inc - All Rights Reserved

Elapsed Time:: 1.078125