Postby mikemeister_admin » Tue Apr 10, 2007 2:56 pm
Ah, if I knew the answer to the question, I'd be well away!
One thing that I look for when sampling points is whether it is in a large or small area and the effect it may have on the rest of the image when I make a change. I'm still very much a beginner in attempting to correct images and I feel that the more information I can get the more hope I have at making a good adjustment. I dont know why, but I feel sort of naked without a histogram representation - sort of gives me something to hold on to, rather than a blank canvas.
In Lab mode (my favorite), where the colours exactly start seems, to me, fairly critical as I increase the saturation - I would not want to clip/blow some colours, just as one could by badly adjusting the endpoints of a lightness channel. In the image we are considering, there is a significant peak in the B channel, that just holds the sky - how would I now that without a histogram? I (faithfully?) follow Greg's earlier suggestions, which is (always?) to cheat! One solution to this Lab image challenge is to completely isolate the sky, play with the rest of the image, and then pop it back (modified a bit). I am quite happy to modify parts of an image to bring out the detail/colour etc that I want to draw the viewer's attention to. I am a great fan of the early painters, who effectively used unsharp masks and darkening masking to make a painting come alive. Adjusting colour is only one part of preparing an image.
In the 'good' old days, I was happy to adjust photos before I took them, by changing the light with reflectors etc or using filters. In this new digital age, I've completely changed how I take pictures - I now attempt to pre-visualise what I'll do with them in PS. I frequently bracket both exposure and focus, so that I can combine the images to create the effect I want to portray - it is not photography (as I define it), but art-photo? I dont manipulate the actual image, just the rendition, tones and colours. The resultant 'image' is sometimes completely different from what was there and what one could have got with a film/print. I'm really enjoying this art-playing and find that previously I would take an hour to set up and take a shot (I'm into nature at the moment) and that would be it. Now I still can take a hour, but then spend up to 3+ hours playing with it! A rather nice wild flower took me all day from start to finish, just to get a single print, but it is kind of special and the result would be completely impossible to achieve with film.
Ah, apologies, I seem to have wandered off the subject a bit! - I was a scientist and am not very artistic, so I like working from facts rather than flare, hence my interest in why such a simple thing as a histogram can be so misleading.