Taken from the Sir Steve Redgrave Bridge. This is heavily cropped, and it's why 24MP cameras are as good as a zoom lens.
Taken from the Sir Steve Redgrave Bridge. This is heavily cropped, and it's why 24MP cameras are as good as a zoom lens.
It didn't look like this, but a) it should have done, and b) this is the way anyone would paint it.
I've been reading Tom Ang's Photography: The Definitive Visual History from Dorling Kindersley. (Superbly printed in China.) Early photography was far more painterly, mainly because of the longer exposures. The film types and lenses also created a softer look closer to an 'accurate' painting, than today's ultra-sharp lenses and 20+ megapixel cameras. Somewhere in the middle were the Glory Days of 35mm Black and White - which is nowhere near as sharp as we think it is.
The adjustments I've made to this are deliberately painterly. I'm starting to think that maybe the default settings on my X-E4 need changing. The catch is this: some changes seem to trigger a bunch of processing in the camera to create the jpeg, as I found taking photos in Mile End Park using someone's Kodachrome-emulation settings.This is a little corner of Mile End Park. The weather was overcast, and the light was diffuse. The X-E4 saw this...
... but my camera was tricked. Deceived. As were my eyes. We didn't see what was there, we saw what was there behind the glare-y, diffuse light. The photograph below is a lot closer to what was really there. What we would have seen if the light was clear.
A recent trip to Epping Forest found us passing by a collection of joy-rides. The sky was half-overcast and the light was diffused. I took some shots anyway because... "this sure is a bizarre sight in the middle of this s**t" as the movies says.
Both shots are cropped. There is a lot more sky in the original, and the camera weighted accordingly, so that the land is darker than one would want.
I twiddled around with the light settings in Photos. Cranking the Exposure up brought everything up, but turned the sky grey. Instead I cranked the Brilliance and Brightness up, which gave much the same effect but kept the sky blue. Then I took a little Saturation out and cranked up the Vibrancy for the colours.