Absolutely amazing, Trey. Thank you for your contribution to the artform of photography. I truly do believe that in the not-too-distant future, your breaking of the "rules" and pushing others to do so in the name of BETTER photos, better stories, and a richer, more beautiful life will have your name mentioned with those like Adams, Leibovitz and those others who TRULY changed photography and the way we all see and experience life.
Trey I love your style and the thought process you put behind it. You make it very relatable to everyone and I like how humble you are. I can't believe you got your camera just few years back, heard you mention in the other video! Thanks for doing what you do!
Thank you for sharing Trey! You are the reason I got so hooked to HDR, and your tutorial is actually the first HDR tutorial I've learnt and benefited from. Hope to be one day as good/successful as you! Missed your Sydney walk recently due to work but wish to join one of your future walks!
Trey, you just reminded me in the film photography era then photographers were using paint brush to remove the imperfections or enhance the color on negatives or prints to get a better final product. In the old days, that was accepted as an artistic skill. Now you're doing it digitally and people called you Evil?
Trey is a little off on some numbers here. Professional cameras have anywhere from 10-14 stops of sensitivity and the human eye has 20+ (in the right conditions). As a photographer, it's crucial to not only understand these concepts, but to understand how your tools (cameras) manage these details. As an excellent photographer, Trey clearly understands these. I just don't want viewers getting confused.
Tom Anderson was my only friend on Myspace, when he joined google plus, I circled him. Once he posted a photo and in the comments I asked if he used photoshop, and he promptly blocked me. It was a legitimate question, I think he's kind of sensitive. He posts some other photo, was all like " Man I just managed to snap this" Obviously shopped... Tom, get over it bro. everyone shops stuff.
Absolutely amazing, Trey. Thank you for your contribution to the artform of photography. I truly do believe that in the not-too-distant future, your breaking of the "rules" and pushing others to do so in the name of BETTER photos, better stories, and a richer, more beautiful life will have your name mentioned with those like Adams, Leibovitz and those others who TRULY changed photography and the way we all see and experience life.
Wonderful work Trey! So proud of you on your stand in your art and wonderful to see your growth in reputation in the photography world.
Way to go Trey - keep giving us all your colors and pixels!!
my all time ultimate inspiration, the great Trey Ratcliff
Trey I love your style and the thought process you put behind it. You make it very relatable to everyone and I like how humble you are. I can't believe you got your camera just few years back, heard you mention in the other video! Thanks for doing what you do!
This is great! Love Trey's work and his talks--someday hope to get to attend one of your workshops... Keep up the great work!
Thank you for sharing Trey! You are the reason I got so hooked to HDR, and your tutorial is actually the first HDR tutorial I've learnt and benefited from. Hope to be one day as good/successful as you!
Missed your Sydney walk recently due to work but wish to join one of your future walks!
Thank you so much for sharing!! Trey's HDR photographs are real inspiration to me :)
Thanks -- I hope you are enjoying the sport of photography with me! :)
Thanks very much @Rafael -- (This is Trey) - appreciate it... and let me know if you have any questions :)
thanks for sharing this, i love trey ratcliff and i love hdr photography aswell
Trey, amazing presentation full of truth an colour.
Fabulous presentation, Trey. First class.
PS: don't forget the Welsh invite! :)
Trey, you just reminded me in the film photography era then photographers were using paint brush to remove the imperfections or enhance the color on negatives or prints to get a better final product. In the old days, that was accepted as an artistic skill. Now you're doing it digitally and people called you Evil?
@Southshore9606 This is a touching story - thank you so much and I hope you have a fun time with photography! :)
Thanks for the kind words @JPatt2575
Thanks Scott ! :)
Thanks @Piperapk ! :)
Thank you Angeline :)
Trey is a little off on some numbers here. Professional cameras have anywhere from 10-14 stops of sensitivity and the human eye has 20+ (in the right conditions). As a photographer, it's crucial to not only understand these concepts, but to understand how your tools (cameras) manage these details. As an excellent photographer, Trey clearly understands these. I just don't want viewers getting confused.
You Good ! You very Good!
It's not so common to find a good talker who is also a good doer. Ratcliff is both. Cheers.
Tom Anderson was my only friend on Myspace, when he joined google plus, I circled him. Once he posted a photo and in the comments I asked if he used photoshop, and he promptly blocked me. It was a legitimate question, I think he's kind of sensitive.
He posts some other photo, was all like " Man I just managed to snap this" Obviously shopped... Tom, get over it bro. everyone shops stuff.
@Cooksterz thanks - I will try! :)
spectaculer :)
More Opportunity than permission, if you don't mind sire Almighty..
Joke ;)