
Can’t resist to answer Tyler Monson’s duplicities in „American View“, which gave me such a lasting smile today.
That late summer look was achieved by some curves magic in bibble5.
markus spring photography
Can’t resist to answer Tyler Monson’s duplicities in „American View“, which gave me such a lasting smile today.
That late summer look was achieved by some curves magic in bibble5.
Well, now I am smiling!
Isn’t that —for you— an unusual amount of manipulation in the virtual darkroom?
Tyler, I am for sure not prone to fall in the HDR-hole, but seeing and showing most of my images in a quite straight manner doesn’t mean that I abstain from all visible processing – I do remember one winter image where I did clone out a branch from a tree which caused mixed reactions in the audience, here: http://markus-spring.info/wp/2010/03/more-thumsee/
In the present case the image situation was an open shadow, a dirty wall and dull green grass, so to emphasize that duplicity as well as the estate of slow decay, I did tug on the curves a little bit more than usual. I have to admit it stands out from the rest of the bunch, but not in a negative way.
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