How to fix this?

jrielley

New member
DSC_1642.jpg

This is my first post here. I was drafted to photograph a wedding because I met the stringent qualification of owning a camera and I would be free. This picture turned out to be one of my favorites, but it's not perfect and I haven't made any changes to it. What would you do to make it better?
 

Moab Man

Senior Member
I actually like the almost overly bright look. The only thing I would do is crop off the dead space on the left hand side. 8x10 instead of 8x12.
 

Moab Man

Senior Member
Cropped to 8x10

In this format my eyes travel two ways. To the girls face and then the flower and sometimes to the center of the picture, the flower, and then to the girls face. The dead space added nothing to it and made it more point and shootish as opposed to a photograph.
DSC_1642_Cropped.jpg
 
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Bourbon Neat

Senior Member
Welcome to the forum. There are a few here that do weddings professionally, maybe they will have good ideas for you.

What is your post processing software? Did you shoot in raw? Any better or worse? I am color blind. Adjusted exposure and dropped the highlights a bit.


BW-1642.jpg
 

jrielley

New member
I shot in RAW and jpeg, this is the unaltered jpeg. I have Photoshop Elements 13 and just bought a book, but haven't used it much.
 

Bourbon Neat

Senior Member
Elements 13 opens the file with camera raw first, that is where you make your exposure, contrast, temp, and such adjustments. Beyond that I am not confident, a newbie to processing.
 

jrielley

New member
This qualifies as a snapshot. I was sitting in a chair putting bandaids on my feet (new shoes) when she walked in and I grabbed my camera and took a couple of quick shots. This is the second one. DSC_1643.jpg
 

WayneF

Senior Member
It's a great picture, but I would crop it vertical, full height 4:5, which is only slightly tight, but it removes the clutter that is not the subject.
 

Moab Man

Senior Member
This qualifies as a snapshot. I was sitting in a chair putting bandaids on my feet (new shoes) when she walked in and I grabbed my camera and took a couple of quick shots. This is the second one. View attachment 165569

Agreed. What I meant by snapshot was the subject was sitting in the center with the dead space to the left giving it that point and shoot snapshot look because "I have to point my point and shoot at what I want in focus in the center of the photo."
 

Moab Man

Senior Member
Here's the vertical crop WayneF mentioned.

DSC_1642_Cropped_Vertical.jpg

Both crops look great, but I prefer the "clutter" in this photo. For me, it kind of adds to where she is.
 
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