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General Photography
Landscape
7 Tips on Capturing the Perfect Fall Photo
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<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 203830" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>Never used one and would probably rather do the post processing pop 99 times out of 100. Lightroom makes it so easy with the eye-droppers for the luminance and saturation sliders. Click the dropper, click on the thing you want to pop, hold the button down and move up to increase and down to decrease. Like a filter it is applied the entire photo, so if I wanted to isolate the effect I would select out the portion of the image into a layer in Photoshop and apply the changes just to the selection, which isn't quite as easy. Or, more likely, I'd use a control point in Nik's Viveza to do it. Nik's Color Efex Pro 4 has specific filters for autumn colors as well.</p><p></p><p>I always prefer to shoot pure and mess with it in the "darkroom", but I totally get the art in doing it all with the camera. Some would call the way I post process the art of saving sloppy photography, and in a lot of cases they'd probably be justified. But hey, we all play to our strengths, right?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 203830, member: 9240"] Never used one and would probably rather do the post processing pop 99 times out of 100. Lightroom makes it so easy with the eye-droppers for the luminance and saturation sliders. Click the dropper, click on the thing you want to pop, hold the button down and move up to increase and down to decrease. Like a filter it is applied the entire photo, so if I wanted to isolate the effect I would select out the portion of the image into a layer in Photoshop and apply the changes just to the selection, which isn't quite as easy. Or, more likely, I'd use a control point in Nik's Viveza to do it. Nik's Color Efex Pro 4 has specific filters for autumn colors as well. I always prefer to shoot pure and mess with it in the "darkroom", but I totally get the art in doing it all with the camera. Some would call the way I post process the art of saving sloppy photography, and in a lot of cases they'd probably be justified. But hey, we all play to our strengths, right? [/QUOTE]
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7 Tips on Capturing the Perfect Fall Photo
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