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Author Topic: Like a painting?  (Read 9490 times)

Peter McLennan

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Like a painting?
« Reply #20 on: April 22, 2009, 11:59:29 am »

Quote from: hkruse
I agree that the power lines should not be removed. I think they are part of the composition and even enhance that.

My first thought was "Lovely!"
My second thought was "Clone out the wires"    

JMHO


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Hans Kruse

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« Reply #21 on: April 22, 2009, 12:02:10 pm »

Quote from: Peter McLennan
My first thought was "Lovely!"
My second thought was "Clone out the wires"    

JMHO

Haha, finally someone came with this suggestion  
But thanks for your comment.
« Last Edit: April 22, 2009, 12:52:53 pm by hkruse »
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Justan

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« Reply #22 on: April 23, 2009, 12:45:49 am »

Great work!

What was the shutter speed?

Hans Kruse

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« Reply #23 on: April 23, 2009, 06:32:48 am »

Quote from: Justan
Great work!

What was the shutter speed?

Thanks and it was taken at 1/125s, f/5.6, ISO 400, 70mm 08:09:33 November 24, 2008 with a 1Ds mk3 and Canon 70-200 f/4L IS. I believe it was taken handheld.

RSL

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« Reply #24 on: April 23, 2009, 10:04:21 am »

Quote from: hkruse
Thanks and so far nobody complained about the electric wires

Why would anyone complain about them? They're one of several artifacts created by the hand of man that makes the photograph interesting. Without the lines and the scattered buildings the picture would be a picture about vegetables, dirt, and weather conditions. As it stands it's a stunning shot.
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Hans Kruse

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« Reply #25 on: April 23, 2009, 10:47:58 am »

Quote from: RSL
Why would anyone complain about them? They're one of several artifacts created by the hand of man that makes the photograph interesting. Without the lines and the scattered buildings the picture would be a picture about vegetables, dirt, and weather conditions. As it stands it's a stunning shot.

Many thanks and I liked the wires also and didn't even think of removing them. If you look carefully there is even another artifact of man: half a car. But I didn't think of removing that one either. Thanks for the feedback. It is always good to know how other feel about the work you do.

JeffKohn

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« Reply #26 on: April 23, 2009, 01:31:53 pm »

I like this image. The composition is nicely balanced, lot of layers created by the hills and the way the light falls on them. While I prefer not to see power lines in an image of an otherwise pristine wilderness, I have no problem with them showing in a rural landscape such as this, where there are numerous signs of civilization. I do feel the sky is a tad dark for this image in color given the warm light on the landscape.
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Jeff Kohn
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Hans Kruse

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« Reply #27 on: April 23, 2009, 01:37:07 pm »

Quote from: JeffKohn
I like this image. The composition is nicely balanced, lot of layers created by the hills and the way the light falls on them. While I prefer not to see power lines in an image of an otherwise pristine wilderness, I have no problem with them showing in a rural landscape such as this, where there are numerous signs of civilization. I do feel the sky is a tad dark for this image in color given the warm light on the landscape.

Hi Jeff,

Many thanks for your comments. I used a graduated filter in Lighroom to darken the sky a bit and give it more structure. I also felt that it "closed" the picture and made it more harmonic. I could have used a physical filter to make the same effect, of course.

EasyEd

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« Reply #28 on: April 23, 2009, 11:08:42 pm »

Hey All,

I really like this image. Nicely composed and processed. The only little annoyance that jumped out at me was the white pickup in the orchard. I might have tried cloning that out. But even it isn't that distracting.

This whole idea of making a photo look like a painting is fascinating. Do many Photographers do that? I quite like it.

One of my alltime favorite painters is Olaf Carl Wieghorst. The pics are from the following site and show his prints for sale. I've no financial interest. I just want to give credit where credit is due before I go on.

http://www.4westernart.com/OlafWieghorst.html

I also simply wanted to show what I think would be a wonderful effect for processing a photo into. I've seen one photo processed so that the background ended up looking like a Wieghorst painting and that was by accident I think as I don't think that was the intent.

Were you aiming for an art style with this Tuscany photo or did it just happen?

-Ed-

PS Hmm Seems the file won't upload Oh well you can look at the prints at the site and see what I mean. Note there are several pages and 5 and 6 - I think - a couple mountain scenes.
« Last Edit: April 23, 2009, 11:15:04 pm by EasyEd »
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Phil Indeblanc

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« Reply #29 on: April 24, 2009, 04:06:10 am »

painterly, contrast, this that.....leave it the way it is, it looks super. dont touch the wires.  
Ok...one thing I would do is add to the left right and bottom the equal amount of black as the top...maybe a touch more to the bottom.
This would likely help resolve someones comment about the sky looking too dark.  

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Hans Kruse

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« Reply #30 on: April 24, 2009, 05:39:16 am »

Quote from: EasyEd
Hey All,

I really like this image. Nicely composed and processed. The only little annoyance that jumped out at me was the white pickup in the orchard. I might have tried cloning that out. But even it isn't that distracting.

This whole idea of making a photo look like a painting is fascinating. Do many Photographers do that? I quite like it.

One of my alltime favorite painters is Olaf Carl Wieghorst. The pics are from the following site and show his prints for sale. I've no financial interest. I just want to give credit where credit is due before I go on.

http://www.4westernart.com/OlafWieghorst.html

I also simply wanted to show what I think would be a wonderful effect for processing a photo into. I've seen one photo processed so that the background ended up looking like a Wieghorst painting and that was by accident I think as I don't think that was the intent.

Were you aiming for an art style with this Tuscany photo or did it just happen?

-Ed-

PS Hmm Seems the file won't upload Oh well you can look at the prints at the site and see what I mean. Note there are several pages and 5 and 6 - I think - a couple mountain scenes.

Hi Ed,

I wasn't aiming for a given painterly art style as such. I was shooting landscapes in the mornings and evenings in the single valley (Val D'Orcia) worth while photographing in the entire Tuscany. When I saw the image on my computer screen it was better than I had imagined when I saw it in the view finder. That's some of the joy of going out shooting that you the second experience of what you actually shot when you see it as the camera saw it on your computer screen.

Hans Kruse

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« Reply #31 on: April 24, 2009, 06:00:58 am »

Quote from: Phil Indeblanc
painterly, contrast, this that.....leave it the way it is, it looks super. dont touch the wires.  
Ok...one thing I would do is add to the left right and bottom the equal amount of black as the top...maybe a touch more to the bottom.
This would likely help resolve someones comment about the sky looking too dark.

Hi Phil,

Many thanks for your comments. I have toned the bottom right corner down a bit and reloaded the image, so it should show up slightly darkened now.

RSL

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« Reply #32 on: April 24, 2009, 07:21:54 am »

Quote from: EasyEd
This whole idea of making a photo look like a painting is fascinating. Do many Photographers do that? I quite like it.

They used to. It was called "pictorialism" and it was incredibly smarmy. When people like Paul Strand began to demonstrate that photography is an art form very different from painting, pictorialism for the most part died. Unfortunately there still are a lot of "artists" who haven't gotten the message and think you can judge photographs on the basis of what they learned in academic "art" classes.
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Hans Kruse

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« Reply #33 on: April 24, 2009, 07:55:30 am »

Quote from: RSL
They used to. It was called "pictorialism" and it was incredibly smarmy. When people like Paul Strand began to demonstrate that photography is an art form very different from painting, pictorialism for the most part died. Unfortunately there still are a lot of "artists" who haven't gotten the message and think you can judge photographs on the basis of what they learned in academic "art" classes.

I agree and my aim and intent with the title was not to refer to this older photographic style. The photograph should be able to stand on it's own and I have never gone to academic "art" classes, so I'm not bogged down by that  

But today there is a whole art and trade built up around doing "paintings", design within Visual Communication done on computers (Mac's!) and in Photoshop. My oldest daughter is doing this for a living. See her homepage here http://www.hvasshannibal.dk/work.html and she is the Hannibal of the two partners of the company). Sometimes part of a photograph may be part of such creations.

RSL

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« Reply #34 on: April 24, 2009, 11:10:31 am »

Quote from: hkruse
I agree and my aim and intent with the title was not to refer to this older photographic style. The photograph should be able to stand on it's own and I have never gone to academic "art" classes, so I'm not bogged down by that  

But today there is a whole art and trade built up around doing "paintings", design within Visual Communication done on computers (Mac's!) and in Photoshop. My oldest daughter is doing this for a living. See her homepage here http://www.hvasshannibal.dk/work.html and she is the Hannibal of the two partners of the company). Sometimes part of a photograph may be part of such creations.

Hans,

I didn't think you were referring to pictorialism. The photograph clearly isn't a pictorialist production (unless it's intended to imitate the kind of painting done by Charles Sheeler, whose paintings imitated the kind of detail you find in photographs.) I think the photograph does stand on its own.

Yes. There are people out there doing very interesting graphic work with computers. You're daughter's stuff is very good.
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