![]() If you've lost or found a piece of photography equipment, please head over to the Lost & Found. Want to talk about some fun or interesting projects you're working on? Got some new (or new-to-you) gear you want to share? Looking to bounce some ideas off of other people for things you want to try? Post in the most recent Community Discussion thread. Post titles must include details as to the subject of the post. Interesting discussion/questions on broader topics may be permitted as self posts at the discretion of the moderators. If you do not wish to post your simple questions to the Official Questions thread we cordially invite you to post your question to /r/AskPhotography instead. Before posting, please check our extensive FAQ your question may already have been answered! When seeking purchase recommendations, please be specific about how much you can spend. Questions asking for help (including equipment purchasing advice) should be posted as comments in the most recent Official Question thread, stickied at the top of the subreddit. Questions Should Be Directed to the Question Thread Feel free to check out the many other photosharing subreddits available on Reddit as well.Ģ. If you just want to share an image you've taken, you're welcome to post in /r/photographs, our sister photo sharing sub. The image should be used to support an overall broad and nonspecific topic/question rather than the focus of the post. Posting images is only allowed as self-post using the photo as an example for the discussion, to either begin a conversation about aspects of the example or to ask a photography-related question. ![]() Ask a Question Official FAQ and Wiki Please be sure to read the FAQ before posting. This is not a good place to simply share cool photos/videos or promote your own work and projects, but rather a place to discuss photography as an art and post things that would be of interest to other photographers. Please subscribe to the Serge Ramelli Youtube channel and check out the awesome courses on his website - PhotoSerge.Com./r/photography is a place to politely discuss the tools, technique and culture of photography. ![]() So if you want an image that is closer to what your eyes see then you'll need a well composed, properly exposed original file which you can re-touch in the computer. Another way to say it is our eyes have a hugely greater exposure latitude to our cameras. Cool eh?īut our cameras can only take one slice at a time so a lot of data is lost in the final Jpeg. If your eyes are open and you're seeing stuff that's what's going on in the background. Our pupils dilate and pick up details in the highlights and shadows and our brains take this confusing mess and make a kind of HDR image of it all so we can make sense of the world around us.Īnd it's happening all the time. So why would there be a difference between what you see and what the camera sees? Our eyes scan almost 180 degrees around us taking millions of images all the time. What he's done is maximise the impact of the image and made it look more the way it was to his eye when the photo was taken. I mean would you have believed just looking at the dull looking image on the left that the RAW image file contained all the data needed to create the one on the right? Serge has not added anything that wasn't there already. To my mind he's the perfect person to help you onto the next step of post production photography. I can show you the first steps so you have a working knowledge then Serge will show you how to take it to the masterclass level of image blending and all the deeper intricacies of Photoshop and Lightroom. ![]() I've learned loads from Serge and I know you will too. Serge is a French photographer working in Paris, his images are awesome and he's a complete wizard when it comes to photo re-touching. So I'd like to introduce you to a friend of mine called Serge Ramelli. If you're a regular here you probably know I'm OK with post production and know my way around Photoshop and Lightroom - but the retouching side of imaging isn't really my thing. ![]()
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