For those who say it's over done, maybe, but that's your interpretation and view of it. Ultimately, post processing allows the PHOTOGRAPHER to recreate their vision for the photo . That might be overdone, over saturated, or not. That's why art, and to a point, photography, is quite subjective. Maybe your intent is to create something totally unrealistic, like almost cartoonish and that's fine. Where it does become a problem is when people start to claim that what they ended up with is what reality was, and in some cases, this is simply NOT true. But to say something is overdone is just a matter of preference. Some like the oversaturated look, some like a more subdued, almost dreamy look... etc. While this MAY be overdone, it's far better than what we started with and you have to look at this as being a training course in how to bring out the "best" in your photos and re-create the scene as you envisioned it at the time of capture (or to try to replicate what the scene looked like, that's your choice). But look beyond the image itself (as the image itself is more or less an example, and I'm sure this is not anything he would put in his portfolio) and look more towards the process and explanation. I think some people are quick to judge something and forget this is more a course about editing your photos using a tool (LR), and not so much "Here's my final image".
One question; It shows that you changed the White balance from the original but it doesn´t show exactly how you did it. Did you use the dropper, by the way? Thanks
Hi Paulo! He's just using the sliders to change the white balance-that's how he gets the custom white balance. He starts adjusting that around the 4:30 mark. Hope that helps!
I think you didn't see a list of camera calibrations because you shot a jpeg image. The camera calibrations are only available if you shoot a RAW image. I'd highly recommend you shoot RAW images; there's so much more editing you can do with a RAW image. When you shoot a jpeg image, the camera does most of the editing for you, leaving you fewer options available in post-processing.
Scott - I always understand all of your tutorials - Great Work.
Always a treat watching you work, Scott. Thanks.
For those who say it's over done, maybe, but that's your interpretation and view of it. Ultimately, post processing allows the PHOTOGRAPHER to recreate their vision for the photo . That might be overdone, over saturated, or not. That's why art, and to a point, photography, is quite subjective. Maybe your intent is to create something totally unrealistic, like almost cartoonish and that's fine. Where it does become a problem is when people start to claim that what they ended up with is what reality was, and in some cases, this is simply NOT true. But to say something is overdone is just a matter of preference. Some like the oversaturated look, some like a more subdued, almost dreamy look... etc.
While this MAY be overdone, it's far better than what we started with and you have to look at this as being a training course in how to bring out the "best" in your photos and re-create the scene as you envisioned it at the time of capture (or to try to replicate what the scene looked like, that's your choice). But look beyond the image itself (as the image itself is more or less an example, and I'm sure this is not anything he would put in his portfolio) and look more towards the process and explanation. I think some people are quick to judge something and forget this is more a course about editing your photos using a tool (LR), and not so much "Here's my final image".
Fantastic!
Thanks Scott, your tutorials are the best! I wish I could afford KelbyOne again I really miss it.
This is great. Thanks so much. I learnt a lot watching this and enjoyed your commentary.
Really fun to watch. Thanks for the vid.
Great work , thanks a lot.I will subscribe to your full course for sure.
Obviously editing is a personal choice.
Brilliant video, thank you for sharing!
Very useful! Thanks
Well done, Scott! Your editing workflow is much like mine... or I should say mine is much like yours. :)
Great work! Thanks!
awesome video man. Keep the good work
great video! love it. thanks for tips.
I think you should do shadow before gradient
best lesson ever, kids
forget the content, just fucking sell your shit
Thanks for sharing!
One question; It shows that you changed the White balance from the original but it doesn´t show exactly how you did it. Did you use the dropper, by the way? Thanks
Hi Paulo! He's just using the sliders to change the white balance-that's how he gets the custom white balance. He starts adjusting that around the 4:30 mark. Hope that helps!
how did you get the different camera collaberations? i only have embedded?
I think you didn't see a list of camera calibrations because you shot a jpeg image. The camera calibrations are only available if you shoot a RAW image. I'd highly recommend you shoot RAW images; there's so much more editing you can do with a RAW image. When you shoot a jpeg image, the camera does most of the editing for you, leaving you fewer options available in post-processing.
"There's no official White Balance-committee" hahaha, great tutorial
I did work 4 Years with Lightroom , this is just a mess what you did there my friend ... ;)
Why would you want to make the Horizon flat... when you're trying to leave "flat... to fabulous?" ;)
So sassy! ;)
Overdone
yaiks. so much color . kinda too much for me. I liked it before you changed contract and exposition
Kelby must be related to Ken Rockwell...
LOL.
Too much; looks cheesy and unreal 👎