Wednesday, June 4, 2014

A rose by any other …

"A rose by any other name would smell as sweet", so said Shakespeare, but would a rose in another color look as pretty?

I had a bit of time on my hands the other day and was rummaging through my archive. I came across the original raw image of one of my “famous” images and thought, why not give it another interpretation? Then I discovered that I had taken two photos of that rose. The other exposure had not even been converted from the raw image file. Totally ignored for six years.

The photos were nothing special, just pictures of a rose in the Botanical Garden of Georgia, photographed way back in May of 2008. But I had used a “café art” interpretation on my Shutterfly gallery cover of one of them. With a lot of noise added it has also served as one of the download practice images for readers of my “Digital Pictures Basics” books. Thus the “fame”.

There were already a number of “interpretations” of this photo in my archive, unshared and unseen. The other exposure, taken from a slightly different angle, has a more disturbing background, thus its total neglect. I decided the classic rose shape deserved some more exposure. Several version were shared on my blogs and in social media, so here is the rest of the story.

First a cropped version of the “famous” one:

A nice enough photo of a rose. Certainly not an exhibition quality image. So it should not surprise that this picture has not been shared before.

Here it is as seen in “café art” dress on my Shutterfly gallery:

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I had made a couple of versions in that style. The blue one is a bit gruesome.

The real “fame”, as I already said, comes form the version used to demonstrate “noise” in photos. With my Digital Pictures Basics books reader also get a link for downloading practice photos. The books explain how to make this into a better photo using Microsoft Photo Gallery. Here is a larger versions and a hopelessly noisy black and white version.

Another previously unpublished version just dropped out the background altogether. I rather like this version.

Now the “other” one

The companion photo has the flowers in the background much closer to the rose. Both photos were taken as verticals. Here is a “café art” version of the previously unused exposure. The full frame as it came out of the camera is used here. As you can see the formatting and the background are less than successful.

I decided that just the classic outline of the blossom could serve as attractive images. In fact, when shared on social media, they were well received.

My favorite tool, especially for working with outlines of objects, is Topaz Simplify. This marvelous “painting” tool, or filter as some call these, has sliders for adjusting the line thickness and the feature sizes to be used, and actually a lot more. Here are four very simple rose “drawings” derived from this image.

So here you have a white rose, two red ones, and a yellow rose. Which looks better to you? Is a rose in another color more beautiful?

Lagniappe

You may have discovered this already. Each image above is a link to the same photo in an album on my OneDrive. You can go back and forth there to inspect them in more detail – even see them as a slide show.

.:.

© 2014 Ludwig Keck

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

The Bet

It was a stupid bet to take, but what can you do when your reputation is on the line? The photo was bad and should never have seen the light of day, but it did, and I said any artist worth his paint can make a masterpiece out of anything.

So here is the photo:

Flower Photo

Poor exposure, camera shake, bad focus, horrible background. But I took it on.

Now for my “masterpiece”:

Flower Painting

So what do you think, did I earn my beer?

.:.

© 2014 Ludwig Keck

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Digging in the Shadows

It was a bit early in the season to find snakes sunning themselves on warm rocks, so we were pleasantly surprised when we came a little one slowly crawling up on a rock. The setting was a little creek in our favorite park, just below a bridge. The bright afternoon sun brightly lit up part of the rock. The rest was in the deep shadow of the bridge we were standing on.

Not much of a photo opportunity, but I took a couple of shots anyway.

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This is were post-processing can rescue an otherwise useless photo. I talked about this in a recent post over in the “other corner” of Café Ludwig. You can read all about it here: Lost your friends to the shadows? This photo seemed a good chance to do some “umbraluminology” – that is my term using poor Latin for “the art of illuminating the shadows”.

I always start in Photo Gallery. The histogram showed that the camera was fooled into underexposing the photo. I have it set for “center-weighted” exposure measuring. The sunlit rock is all the sensor would see.

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Moving the Shadows slider all the way to the right brought out detail in the shadow, but not nearly enough.

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Before I reached for more powerful tools I decided a crop would be in order. Then I took a look at what I could do in Picasa. The “Fill light” slider helped some but it was not much of an improvement. I even tried the HDR effect. Nothing there.

Next I took the photo into onOne Perfect Effects 8. I really like the HDR effect that tool provides. With that I could bring out more details from the shadows. The noise also became quite noticeable. My next attempt was to see what I could do with PaintShop Pro. I selected the triangular shadow part and applied some noise reduction. Then I took the whole photo into Topaz Detail for bringing out some of the fine detail. No, none of these tools turned this into a “fine art” photo. But I did pull out an amazing amount of detail. This is not a story about artistic accomplishments but rather an illustration of just how much detail is literally lurking in the shadows of photos. The moral of the story is this: Don’t discard a photo just because the faces of your friends are unrecognizably dark, or that the shadows hide all the interesting stuff. Be aggressive in post-processing.

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Get skilled in “umbraluminology”, there is treasure “in them thar shadows”.

.:.

© 2014 Ludwig Keck

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Museum

I met them at the Museum

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They were not very talkative but told many old tales!

At the Michael C. Carlos Museum

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Museum Photography

Museum Photography

.:.

© 2014 Ludwig Keck

Monday, March 17, 2014

Southeastern Railway Museum

A day at the Southeastern Railway Museum with the SPS

Duluth, Georgia is home to the Southeastern Railway Museum with a marvelous collection of railroad memorabilia. Here a few photos and a bit of café art from a photo outing with the Southeastern Photographic Society.

Coming Out

The Southern Crescent

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Railcar Truck

Railcar Truck

DO NOT HUMP

Faded Glory

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Locomotive C.V. 21

Locomotive C.V. 21 coming at you.

All Aboard!

All aboard!!

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Working on the Railroad

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General II

.:.

© 2014 Ludwig Keck