I've recovered sufficiently from Nov 5 to be able to look at this photo objectively. Thanks for "mutins". A new word for me.
"Stiil life" is usually associated with previous eras. This is a still life with a modern aesthetic.
A limited range of colours with blocks of tones. Straight lines, sharp edges and angles. Plus one simple teardrop of a curve.
The line of blue flowers running along the upper shadow edge and paralleling the shadows below is very important in bringing the vase and background together. Same for the shadow of the vase and the shadow on the right hand side of the picture. The repetition of shapes and lines brings everything together. Same for the corner of the desk and the shadow corner top right.
I have to ask. Did you wait for the flowers and shadow to line up like that or was it serendipity? Not that it matters.
Congrats. The photo is quite inspired and I'm not exaggerating.
I'll get to the image eventually. At this point, I'm more interested in the camera. I have been interested in foveon sensors since they were first announced. Theoretically, they might be argued to (potentially) be the best way available to record colour. I didn't know that Polaroid played with them. Sigma continues to try to develop the foveon sensor but it never quite seems to make it. What format is the image in and what do you use to do the processing? How does what we are seeing (in jpeg) compare with what you can see before posting?
The photo. The sky and its range of tones and the gradation between the tones, makes the image. The tree silhouettes and the lines are bit players (pun alert) that help showcase the sky. The lines to the right give balance to the taller trees on the left. The lines from top centre help our eyes transition down through the tone range of the sky.
From a 2004 4.5mpl camera it is an impressive shot.
Thank you Rich. The light, though it was around noon, was pretty impressive because it came right through those gold and orange leaves, I guess because it was so bright.
Those are nice crops. I actually shot some variations with very similar framing as those, also from the other side. It was too pretty not to make a lot of captures.
I expect there are several. The name of the trail that leads here was Fairyland Trail, and it did seem enchanted.
Thank you Mike. I found it achingly beautiful too. The noon light filtering through those leaves created a magical effect. I would not claim the exposure was perfect but it was maximized for what I was trying to do and what I was trying to do it with.
Your description is about how I shoot most things, on full manual with base ISO, then I play Devils' Deal with the aperture and shutter to figure out what I can live with that won't clip something. With an m43 camera auto ISO is out of the question. Aperture behaves a little differently than with other formats, and shutter speed can go pretty low with the good stabilizer. I did try some blended exposures both in camera and in PS, but wasn't happy with them, they lost a little of the light-magic. I did have to underexpose a bit and brighten in post to get the base file I wanted for further work.
There's a double panorama effect here that works rather well in getting the viewer's attention. First we have a semi panoramic frame to the image and then within that frame we have another panoramic frame around the action. A subjective viewpoint is established.
It's fun to look at and I'd imagine watching a video of the movements would be fun as well.
The image was shot in raw .X3F and converted to TIFF with Sigma Pro Photo 5.5.3. Then edited first with RawTherapee then in the GIMP - a simple blending with a color gradient layer, hence the fancy sky.
Yes, with a lovely location like you had I also would take numerous shots from different vantage points and focal lengths and then in post see which work best.
A few comments have been about exposure of the sky - which BTW looks fine to me - but the image when downloaded looks like the scene DR was in excess of the camera's capability. So it is that there are a good few bottomed areas too.
This comment is not intended to critique the original but rather to offset any simplistic processing advice, e.g. ETTR ...
Dan, I think your advice here is in the "teaching your Grandmother to suck eggs" category.
minniev clearly knew exactly how to control her particular camera and the processing she knew she would be using. The proof was in the image.
Thank you Xpat. As you remember the sky, which version is closest? As I said, I've never owned one but the idea behind the Foveon is intriguing.
*I wrote the above and thought I'd do some follow up. Ha. You have been around for a long time mate. I bumped into a 2014 discussion between you and Jim Kasson re Foveon and B&W. Having read the discussion, I'm now considerably less Foveon intrigued. *
So help me Dan. And my statement to minniev was discussing the image. minniev got the exposure she needed to get the image she got perfectly. End of discussion.
I know you were talking about the image and you said the exposure needs to be perfect to get some blue in the sky.
I posted my opinion saying why the exposure does not need to be perfect to not clip the skies as you stated with your opinion.
For scenes like that the exposure can easily be 1/2 a stop smaller than perfect and the sky will still be blue without significant degradation of final image quality, especially if shooting raw and editing in 16 bits.
Interesting discussion, thanks for joining in. The scene did indeed exceed the camera's capabilities as you note. Mid-day on a super bright cloudless fall day, extreme contrast in scene. My camera is old, and it's an m43 camera so it has a small sensor. I know its limits so I shoot to get not a finished file but a file I can work with in post to recreate what I saw (in this case), or sometimes what I wish I'd seen. In such circumstances there is little room to the right to expose to, so I capture what's available and work with it. I'm not a formulist, and getting what I need to create the image I imagine is what drives how I shoot.
YES, I got the exposure I needed to create the final image I envisioned. That is what I do whenever I'm taking pictures. I am not wedded to the results of a capture. I am driven by the imagined final result and what I mean to do with it to take it where I want it to go. If I don't have a clear idea of where I want it to go, I just try to get the most good pixels I can, and will await inspiration later. In this case, I knew I wanted to recreate what I saw and not be limited by how the camera captured it with its limitations and the lighting conditions of a bright mid-day.
I think we may be arguing semantics. Perfect for me means the best file to do what I want with. I think that is what Mike means, not necessarily perfect by the textbook definition in the manual I studied when I was learning to use my camera.
And for whatever reason the exposure blending did not yield the results I expected and usually get. I have my files so I'll try again with them when I have time. I had hopes that I'd be able to get more from that effort than I got. But this image was pretty much what I saw when I came upon it on the rightly named Fairyland Trail.