Good question - one I've often pondered myself. Usually when I see forums with people posting pictures (much like this one) it's not too long before someone posts an image that gets people cooing about how good it looks, but I'll sit there and think, "hmm, that's not really a photo anymore, it's just a jpeg that once started life as a photograph". I'm a bit of a purist when it comes to photo manipulation. I really can't stand HDR, it looks so fake - 99% of the time a much better photo could have been taken by using an ND grad filter.
Things like tweaking contrast, saturation, colour balance, slight cropping, sharpening, etc, are all ok in my book. After all there's a hell of a lot of this going on inside a digital camera regardless of whether we tweak the images in such a way afterwards. Dodging and burning is of course a valid technique from the days of film, but now that it's so easy I'm always reluctant to do it myself. Rather than darkening a specific part of the image I always ask myself whether I should've taken a better photo with better lighting/composition/exposure in the first place - no excuses not to on digital. Noise reduction is fair game too, imho. Film grain could be aesthetically pleasing, but rarely can the same be said for digital high ISO noise.
I think it depends on what you're trying to create as well. If you're aiming to produce an arty shot of a certain style or ambience then a fair bit of PP is fair game. I don't do much of that personally, and I aim for my photos to be interesting but realistic representations of how a scene/object/person looked.
When you boil it down you can do whatever the heck you want. There is no rule. Just think about what you are trying to accomplish. My friend James has made a living using photoshop since highschool. He is a master at it and can do some amazing things to turn a so-so picture into a great one. He selectively edits parts of photos, removes an errant tree limb jutting into the photo, etc. Thats his style. He is trying to make a piece of art. I on the other hand am simply trying to capture the reality of something, so I don't do any of that fancy photoshop stuff.
If yes, then all pixel based editing is banned. I will not remove tree branches, clone stamp pimples away, remove distracting elements out of the picture etc.
Am I allowed artistic impression ?
If yes, then I'd probably use heavier split toning and other slight artistic tweaks with good taste.
Do I have to stick to reality?
I spit in the face of Deviant Fart. You all suck at Photoshop and there's no artistic integrity to be found inside an Adobe program. Die. And rot in hell with your Photoshop magic.
Anywhoo...
I'm completely anal about some tweaks that are quite impossible to achieve with a camera and lights alone so I'll end up tweaking black level and shadow contrast almost every time. I'll burn and dodge till my eyes bleed, I'll split tone the unsplittable, bump up saturation while decreasing some channel saturation, adjust white balance to cooler while warming up the whites and sooner or later you'll find me sobbing, in a pool of my own urine and Coco-Puffs spilled on the floor, clutching my D80 in my tear soaked fist.
hehe.. I find myself tending the same direction as STROBE on this. I do touch up images to remove dust, and the noise profiler in NeatImage often does a really good job of removing grain. I've never used the burn or dodge tools yet, but as STROBE said, it is a historically legitimised darkroom activity, so I probably wouldn't feel bad about doing that if I felt I needed to.
Seems to come down to a question of photographer/documenter vs artist/painter, as Spanky says. I guess I perceive myself as more of a photographer. It's true that you can make a really crap image look great in Photoshop, and that's exactly the problem. Anything I add artistically directly and proportionately subtracts x2 or more photographically, in my head at least. It's too bloody easy to use Photoshop to make crap look good.. for me, if what I'm about to do isn't something that I'd do in the darkroom, then I won't do it. I'm actually really glad I took O' level photography at college, or I don't think I'd even be willing to perform the standard darkroom stuff on my images without being wracked by guilt.
My thoughts on "photoshopping". Generally, all I do is adjust levels, crop, noise reduction, and some sharpening. I never do anything with contrast or saturation as levels adjustment works for me. I have tried messing with curves, but don't have the touch for it. I've messed the photos up more by messing with curves than I've improved anything.
I don't know where the following falls under, toning? Occasionally, I will do the standard B&W or Sepia conversions. Or something similar as exampled in this photo....
It's a preset that I use for an antiquing type photo. I haven't touched dodge and burn as I don't yet know what they do.
I think there is a difference between "photoshopping" and "developing" a digital photo. In film, you have to develope the photo, thus doing any standard type developement in photoshop is perfectly fine with me.
personally i see nothing bad with photoshopping - photo straight out of camera will never look exactly as you saw it with your eye, so why not help it a little bit?
you could as well say that doing black&white photos is very unreal...
Photoshopping is not an issue for me. In fact, I enjoy post processing as much, if not more, as taking photos with the camera. I actually feel weird when all the adjustments I have to do are levels/curves.
I feel pp allows me to give an image a unique character and mood. I don't take photos to document reality. I take them for aesthetic reasons, and in that sense pp just gives you more control. If I'm able to capture something truly extraordinary with the camera, then sure, I won't touch it up much. Otherwise, into Photoshop it goes
I see with the TVR you used an artificial blur (correct me if I am wrong, though) which is nice, but not to be overdone. Also, when taking pictures of cars, get down so your head is level with the taillights.
For example, there was all sorts of distractions behind this one:
The info on the zone system is very helpful, Jay.. that's turned a few lights on upstairs in my head! I have a rather useful filter that isolates all nine zones for you to work on. Now that I understand Adams' concept, I can use it healthily!
I took some photos in fairly miserably wet conditions today, down at the railway. Back at my desk, I worked specifically to the premise that any changes I made to images should only reinforce the experience I had.. specifically to not change what had been to something that wasn't.
One advantage of wet days on steam railways is that the "steam effect" is naturally amplified.
I like the picture a lot, Sam. It looks very "romantic"; you know, man and machine, the symbiotic relationship of both...
So, I gave up on my Nikon 18-55mm kit lens, and switched to my 50mm F/1.8, until I get a new lens: a Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8. Looks to be a good "walkaround" lens, since I visit this place once a week (I am a member).
So, this is what happens when you stop using the automatic setting and start playing with a camera manually, a very interesting result. Except for contrast, that is exactly how it came out of the camera.
As threatened, here's some pics from Kew Gardens. Less than I thought I had worth sharing tbh, so I've added some taken that night, too.
#1
A700, Tamron 90mm, 1/320s, f/2.8
#2 The lake and fountain in front of the palm house at Kew.
A700, Tamron 90mm, 1/1000s, f/2.8
#3 The palm house itself.
A700, Tamron 90mm, 1/200s, f/8
#4 A water lilly.
A700, Minolta 50mm, 1/3200s, f/2.2
Well that's quite enough flower & nature pictures for now. Later that night, I was strolling around the Embankment and the South Bank. Well, I say "strolling" - what I actually mean was battling with a gale force wind blowing down the Thames, which makes me all the more pleased with the following photos as they were all handheld in a strong wind, and you can see below each one what the shutter speed was.
#5 The Embankment.
A700, Sony 18-70 @ 18mm, 1/6s, f/4
#6 Charing Cross station and Hungerford Bridge.
A700, Sony 18-70 @ 35mm, 1/3s, f/5.6
#7 I don't believe this one really needs any explanation...
A700, Sony 18-70 @ 30mm, 1/2s, f/5
Looking back through these pics makes me all miserable now - had such a nice time in London that I didn't want to come home, especially since the new neighbours in the flat upstairs are doing an admirable job of proving how little sound insulation there is.
Bah, I'm beginning to get more jealous of everyone here as more and more photos are posted.
I am so limited with my little superzoom. I can get some decent photos out of it, but can't get any DOF unless I am right up on top of the subject at max focal length with a ton of room in behind the subject.
I do envy all you folks with the dSLRs. Shoot whatcha got I guess.
2 weeks until the RC airshow. I hope to fill up two 2 gig cards with photos and video (one benefit to using a superzoom over a dSLR ). This Thursday, now that today is the last day of school for my daughter, I think I'm going to head out to the local dirt bike track. Both my 7 year old and I will be sporting cameras. I hope to teach her a bit about the settings of a camera. She brought home her certificate for straight A's for her first year of school, so I'm pretty proud of her. She should be able to pick up on using the camera outside of Program Shift mode. She has a little 3 mp Nikon Coolpix 880 from around 2000.
hehe Mike.. I know how you feel.. it's a bit like trying to go hiking cross-country wearing a pair of sneakers.. you can try it and probably will survive, but you just know you'd be a lot better off wearing a decent pair of clod-hoppers.
I took an hour out today to go take a few photos. I have a 500mm F8 Reflex-Nikkor - an old manual focus lens that I think I need a lot more practice focusing with!
@ Jay.. what's the problem with the Nikon 18-55mm? I was thinking of picking one up. I only have a 24-50, which was great on my F4 but for digital is a bit useless as a wide-angle.
@ STROBE, those embankment/Thames photos are fantastic! What's noise like with that A700? Did you need to do any cleaning up?
What is wrong with it? Nothing at all! But, it has a limited F stop range, and it is a DX lens. With the Tamron I am getting is a lens to take me to the next level of photography, because I can control so much more. The 18-55 is a great walkaround lens, but with all lensne, you get what you pay for.
I was going to get the highly coveted 18-200 Nikkor, but after fiddling with it in a camera store I discovered that it is OK in all ranges. I actually think it is about $200 overpriced.
I would love to be able to afford £300 for an 18-200, but it's simply out of my price range at the moment. I like my D1x specifically because it'll work with any Nikkor I find under a heap of musty-smelling romance paperbacks in a garage sale.
What's the disadvantage of DX lenses, then? I figured it was a "for-digital" designation.. is it more of a "for consumers" lens? The contrast looks fine enough in that photo, Jay.
DX-lenses have been optimized for DX-sensors (APS-size). Disadvantages? You get black corners on a full-frame sensor.
Anywhoo...
Some action shots now. My friend asked me to snap some photos on their small festival gig. Sunny summer evening, sexy girls, stoner rock and Mesa Boogie Dual Rectifiers...