Bill Sievers Posted January 19, 2007 Share #1 Â Posted January 19, 2007 Advertisement (gone after registration) This M8 is rockin!!!! Â I am still without any IR cut filters. But I am really feeling the groove of this camera! I have settled on Lightroom for post processing and am very happy with the results. I am also using my Expodisc when I am concerned about skintone and WB. As you can see from my stream I am shooting in all kinds of mixed light. When the Magenta problem rears its ugly head I deal with it in processing. So far so good, but I would hate to have to shoot a wedding in color. ;-) Â Enjoy: Flickr: Photos from Captainvideo Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted January 19, 2007 Posted January 19, 2007 Hi Bill Sievers, Take a look here M8 Rock and Roll. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
arthury Posted January 19, 2007 Share #2 Â Posted January 19, 2007 The composition and situational images are really interesting. The color versions looked like they were cross-processed in the film world. Did you use a custom WB or just tungsten? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Sievers Posted January 19, 2007 Author Share #3 Â Posted January 19, 2007 The composition and situational images are really interesting. The color versions looked like they were cross-processed in the film world. Did you use a custom WB or just tungsten? Â The Causeway Bay images were processed with a Velvia preset in Lightroom. Â The Kowloon images and the Carnival are slightly saturation and contrast adjusted and in some Vintage BW. Â As you can see vibrance abounds in these parts. Â This week I am playing around with getting film aura from the camera. Â Lightroom and Digital Film Tools are the processing programs I have been using. Â My approach is if the color jumps out go color, otherwise I go BW. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest WPalank Posted January 19, 2007 Share #4 Â Posted January 19, 2007 Bill, "Do you Leica my stripes?" Brilliant! Did you try "Hot shots" with the foreground heads in pure sillouhette? Nice work! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.