Biggest Mistake in Bird/Wildlife Photos Post-Processing
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- Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
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tinmanlee.com
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What an underrated channel!
WOW! I love your noise-cancelling headphones analogy. THANK YOU.
Power is nothing without control! You are sharing all the secrets, I hope the people can see! Thank you Tin Man.
Tin Man, you were all over the place but your enthusiasm and smile overcame all of that. I have seen a few of your videos and I am a fan. Your commitment to getting better and sharing it with everyone is inspirational. Just as your photography has become great over the years, so have your presentations. Thank you.
Absolute gold. Thanks Tin Man. I’ve watched all of your videos and many repeatedly. I’ve been a professional photographer for many years. Inspiring and insightful. A breakthrough for me listing to your teachings.
This is something different and just what I needed, so much to think about. Thank you
Amazing information. Watched tons of channel and this channel nailed it. Very much underrated.
Hi Tin Man, you are awesome. Love the way you explained the things. I have not come across anybody who gives so much importance to the basics of art. Love it man! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. Your journey as a photographer is highly impressive and inspiring.
I love editing in PS and LRC. Always have. Almost as much fun as shooting-taking your image into art. TY, Tin Man🙏
Eye opening Tin Man. Love.
Good overall content...keep its coming!!
I learned more from you since recently discovering you. I thank you but now I have to go back and redo my images with great excitement. Thanks so much! I love your approach and excitement.
See I’m so happy to hear that! Stay tuned. I will post more videos.
This was great, thank you.
Glad I can do this favour to you: I love post processing 😊. Honestly! I fully agree with you. - Besides: Modern cameras have even 14 bit raw, such as Nikon even in lossless compressed mode, you may select between 12 and 14 bit. Fujifilm GFX system has even 16 and that 2 bits are a huge improvement to 14. However you need this guys finding the animals. The best scout I know at my place is over 70 years old, also huntsman, but he shoots only jpg (to be precise: both, but he does not edit) 🙈. But his images are awesome, he comes soooo close to the animals like no one else I know.
Very helpful information Tin Man.
Hi Tim, thanks for wonderful video. You have created entirely new dimensions for editing, just raised the bar. Now onwards, lots of new things will cross my head not just few sliders in LRC which just produced global changes in my photos. The visual journey to hook was missing.Great stuff 👍
You really are a captivating teacher; very good, thanks for sharing your knowledge.
You are so kind. Thanks for the motivation.
Just found your videos. Very interesting. Thanks for all of your tips.
I love post processing 😊
Very interesting. Thank you.
Great info🙏
#1..you must be there!!
This also resonates the importance of a great lens.
I love post processing!!!
A very interesting video, this type of content is the most rewarding for me.
Thanks for sharing your philosophy.
Regards.
Thanks for watching my video from like a year ago. Glad to know its helpful.
I'm weird, I enjoy post processing almost as much as taking the photo in the first place; depending on the weather!
Post processing is very healing to one’s mind.
This video with your information is pure gold.
It's long, but the way you present it is great!
I think just the point about the disturbing factors in the image is applicable to many other types of photography :)
Learned some new stuff, thank you for that.
So glad to hear and thanks for “reviving” this video of mine. Really appreciate it. I should do more of this kind of videos.
@@TinManLee Yes, please. These are of real added value and not this classic vlogging nonsense on youtube. Your approach on this channel is definitely right. All the videos are informative and educational.
Really really appreciate it. Thank you!!
I would like to agree with all that you said. I have just watched this video for a second time in the last 2 weeks. You teach in such an enthusiastic way and your message is pure gold...thankyou!
Great points
Thanks for your kind words
Thank you for this. I am an amateur hobbyist. I would love to take wildlife pictures, I have a D7500 and AFP 70-300 4.5-5.6 and will try to use it to full potential. Thanks for your advice and help.
I enjoy the post work, time consuming but necessary as I shoot sports and scan through 1200 to 2k files per event...usually end up with about 10% saved to my web site.
Hey Tin Man! Thank you for making this video! It is wonderful to watch you get so excited about teaching!
You make some excellent points about the Human Visual Cortex and GRADUALLY introducing local retouching that will lead the viewer to "the hook" thereby adding "enchantment" to our images. My Photoshop skills are fairly basic. I was wondering whether I could achieve at least part of this enchantment objective in LIghtroom through the use of radial filters with their center at the hook using very minor changes in exposure, contrast, sharpness to create more tensions?
P.S. You only mentioned three of the 9 different "tensions" that you adjust. What are the other 6?
So glad to hear. Yes. Lightroom is super powerful these days. The brush can subtract subject to do subtle adjustment on background too. The radial filter can do the same thing to create that gradual tension. I may do a more detailed in RUclips soon. Been sick for two weeks. Warm and cold, bright and dark, sharp vs blur. Mostly these few but in detail it can be broken into 9.
And so sorry for the super late reply. I recently restarted RUclips and just saw the comment.
He just mentioned kung fu as well.... I need friends like this
Hahahaha love it. Big thanks.
I loved rhia video, but moreoever it confirmed what I was already tryong to do!
Leonardo used a technique called sfumato dark and light to create a sense of haze and sharpness.
I use Nikon NX Studio to process my images..in camera adjustments stay with image in this program...others its does not.
Listening for the 3rd time today. Wow!
Wait what!! Thanks a lot that means a lot :) I’m planning to make a new video doing some demo on post processing so stay tuned.
@@TinManLee always eager to see your new videos. I’m learning a lot, thanks for you wonderful work.
I'd say that this is one worth doing over and not as a live stream, that would seem to be why you jumped around so much and sometimes didn't make your point clear. Great content but you need to gradually bring your point into focus.
The brightest part of the Mona Lisa is the chest area where there are no details. The sharpening on this video is so subtle it's hard to determine which part is sharp.
Hi Tin Man, great video, as usual! Can you tell me which book by Leonardo you are referring to? Thanks
Leonardo Da Vinci by Walter Isaacson.
Thank you!!@@TinManLee
Good stuff. Add oil
The photos are excellent. The idea reasonable enough. Edit 'towards the hook'. The explanation however is criminally prolix
Image should speak for itself also...
Van gogh’s paintings; the Mona Lisa painting: not “photos”😘
Better video quality than the previous video I saw from this professional photographer, now up to 720 in 2020.
This is a re-play of a Facebook livestream. blame facebook for only 720p that is a restriction they set.
This guy wins world class photo competitions.......I would pay attention to what he says and care less about the stupid video quality!!
@@christosphillips3568 His photography superb, the video quality poor.
Who cares... he is giving tips on how to improve your PHOTOGRAPHY.
Way too long. It should be a 15 minute presentation, at max.