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Bin it or Keep it?

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 5:15 pm
by Alex
Two more from today's shoot. I really like these two photos, but the shadow on the face caused by the tree is too distracting, I think. I used SB800 with LSPJ II (with inverted dome) pointed straight up with flash comp. of -1.0. Obviously this was not enough for the fill effect on her face (position of the flash should have been different). I think next time I will use sb800 on a tripode as remote fill directed at the point were tree meets the face. Is it the way to avoid such a shadow? I will endevour to re-shoot this one in the future. However, do you think these two shots are rubbish or worth worth keeping?

Image

Image


and for the record, I prefer No.2.

Thanks.

Alex

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 5:34 pm
by avkomp
I dont mind the facial expression on both these.
I feel the strong backlighting doesnt help either of these though.

A darker background may well work wonders for these

steve

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 5:36 pm
by Michael
B/W conversion, burn the tree, dodge the dark part of that face and see how that goes

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 5:49 pm
by Alex
Michael wrote:B/W conversion, burn the tree, dodge the dark part of that face and see how that goes


Thanks, Michael. Gave this a quick go. It works except for the face texture has a change where I dodged. I might follow it by some cloning (skin grafting :)). Don't know if this can be done on the colour version. Might give it a go.

Alex

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 5:52 pm
by PiroStitch
The tree and background are very distracting for me, especially the tree's shadow. I'm out of ideas as to how to improve or save the pic....

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 6:27 pm
by Simon
Sorry mate bin 'em

There's too many things competing with each other here and the compostion just doesnt sit with me.

Might have been better to get some more eye contact and reduce your flash some what.

Hope you dont mind the comment but I'd rather be truthful :D

I reckon:

    1. Keep the model - she's very pretty and very photogenic

    2. Put the camera down and get a pencil and paper and picture in your mind some poses and some props you see her in, write them down

    3. Review the list in a few days then enact the items you still feel good about

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 10:47 pm
by Michael
I had a quick play in PS and came up with this, not much but perhaps a PP suggestion?

Image

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 11:08 pm
by Alex
Thank you for your comments, guys. Michael, I still think it looks bad - no offens intended. I will bin and re-shoot.

Cheers
Alex

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 11:10 pm
by Michael
Good luck with the re shoot

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 11:33 pm
by cameraguy21773
The B&W version is quite nice as an informal. To improve it significantly you should probably do as suggested and reshoot. This is a lovely girl but tell her to lose the corful eye makeup for your next shoot (please!).

PostPosted: Sun May 14, 2006 11:58 pm
by Alex
Thanks, guys. I think I will reshot. I like this pose, but ideally I want background with no blown highlights and better fill flash on face. Cameraguy, I agree regarding the make up :-) Michael, thanks, as a matter of exercise I tried to reproduce your b&w, not sure if I succeeded though, but it does look marginally better than the original.

Image