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Have a question about Photo Editing software (Photoshop, Paint Shop Pro, etc.), improving your photos, etc.? Our crew of Photo Screeners is here to help you out!
Will be editing a number of images I took at Istanbul that all have similar contrast to this image below. Obviously somewhat difficult weather conditions and taken in the morning.
This one was rejected for too much or too little contrast.
Should I be aiming at adding or removing contrast? And is there any general rule of thumb as to how I should try and get the contrast right first go for the trickier images like this one? Generally I feel I have a good gauge as to editing contrast for most of my images.
Will be editing a number of images I took at Istanbul that all have similar contrast to this image below. Obviously somewhat difficult weather conditions and taken in the morning.
This one was rejected for too much or too little contrast.
Should I be aiming at adding or removing contrast? And is there any general rule of thumb as to how I should try and get the contrast right first go for the trickier images like this one? Generally I feel I have a good gauge as to editing contrast for most of my images.
Have a question about Photo Editing software (Photoshop, Paint Shop Pro, etc.), improving your photos, etc.? Our crew of Photo Screeners is here to help you out!
I've combined your threads, but any new ones will simply be deleted.
It is unlikely you will be able to 'fix' the contrast on this image, as the lack of direct light on the subject is not something you can usually compensate for with editing.
EDITING ADVICE PLEASE: Hi all, have recently made the switch from Canon EOS 90D to an R7, shooting RAW+JPEG at the moment. I'm not a seasoned RAW person so I'm still learning to edit the images in a way that I'm satisfied with.
I shot landings for the first time with the R7, and I'm dealing with this weird outline around the aircraft when I equalise the shot (specifically around the gear and the tail). These are the JPEG images straight from the camera with minimal editing in photoshop.
I've never dealt with this before so I'm wondering if these are images that will be rejected or is this normal? The below images are the photo itself, and the equalised shots from both photoshop and the JP queue tool (the image is not currently in the queue).
EDITING ADVICE PLEASE: Hi all, have recently made the switch from Canon EOS 90D to an R7, shooting RAW+JPEG at the moment. I'm not a seasoned RAW person so I'm still learning to edit the images in a way that I'm satisfied with.
I shot landings for the first time with the R7, and I'm dealing with this weird outline around the aircraft when I equalise the shot (specifically around the gear and the tail). These are the JPEG images straight from the camera with minimal editing in photoshop.
I've never dealt with this before so I'm wondering if these are images that will be rejected or is this normal? The below images are the photo itself, and the equalised shots from both photoshop and the JP queue tool (the image is not currently in the queue).
Thank you,
Chris
Hi, the wavy line effects are compression artefacts from JPEG image format. To remove the artefacts, use the RAW format on the camera. Then convert it to JPEG.
My question is whether the outline around the aircraft, specifically the gear and tail, and any other elements of the image, are grounds for rejection.
I have never had these issues with previous cameras.
My question is whether the outline around the aircraft, specifically the gear and tail, and any other elements of the image, are grounds for rejection.
I have never had these issues with previous cameras.
Hi, yes, it would be rejected for overprocessed. To fix it, avoid using highlights, shadows, clarity, vibrance, and dehaze sliders.
EDITING ADVICE PLEASE: Hi all, have recently made the switch from Canon EOS 90D to an R7, shooting RAW+JPEG at the moment. I'm not a seasoned RAW person so I'm still learning to edit the images in a way that I'm satisfied with.
I shot landings for the first time with the R7, and I'm dealing with this weird outline around the aircraft when I equalise the shot (specifically around the gear and the tail). These are the JPEG images straight from the camera with minimal editing in photoshop.
I've never dealt with this before so I'm wondering if these are images that will be rejected or is this normal? The below images are the photo itself, and the equalised shots from both photoshop and the JP queue tool (the image is not currently in the queue).
Yes, overprocessed rejection is certain. If not added in editing, then in-camera settings are causing this.
JetPhotos.com is the biggest database of aviation photographs with over 5 million screened photos online!
I'm assuming it's due to the equipment box on the ground toward the front of the aircraft. Happy to be corrected here, but it isn't obstructing the aircraft? It's obstructing the AN124 behind but there's a reasonable gap between the equipment box itself and the fuselage of the A321.
...or would this be counted as foreground clutter? This would come as a surprise as there is another image taken from a similar angle up in the JP database where the equipment box is present in the exact same location!
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