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paulja

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Nice shot...

Canon EOS with ? which lens?

 

Thanks for sharing

 

Bit on the magenta side, Canon has a tendency to pull to that side in that kind of light.....

I am not on photo editing computer, but will look at it later and heck the histogram etc

 

 

 

Cheers, JRM

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i shot it with a 400mm f2.8 non modular leica lens..and canon 60d with a fotodiox pro adapter 100 iso ..i stay in one spot and just wait for them to land ,,,i focus with live view i helps ..paul

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Nice shot...

Canon EOS with ? which lens?

 

Thanks for sharing

 

Bit on the magenta side, Canon has a tendency to pull to that side in that kind of light.....

I am not on photo editing computer, but will look at it later and heck the histogram etc

 

 

 

Cheers, JRM

 

OK . I took it into Photoshop.. walked the "grey dropper" in Curves in Photoshop and voila..i and cropped it a little and voila.. actually a very good capture , the colour cast hides both the sharpness and detail.

 

Cheers, JRM

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leicamann ,,,im not good with the computer,,i have no idea what i might have done to corrupt the image ,,are you saying that i pushed it to far in photoshop or is it the way that i download it ?? please understand most of this computer work is chinese to me ....thanks paul

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leicamann ,,,im not good with the computer,,i have no idea what i might have done to corrupt the image ,,are you saying that i pushed it to far in photoshop or is it the way that i download it ?? please understand most of this computer work is chinese to me ....thanks paul

 

 

No..what I am saying is learn to recognize WHEN the camera is giving the image a colour cast, a tint , a false un-natural colour tone .

The simplest way to "correct" that in Photoshop is to find either perfect "white spot" or neutral "gray tone" in the image..using the tool "curves" or "levels" you will find 3 "eye droppers"..these are tools to help you correct the exaggerations the camera may make.

Like I said the Canon EOS has a habit of giving images a purple like tone, which is not whats actually there, the Leica DMR has a tendency to exaggerate the reds and push towards a yellow hue.

When you "see " that happening, the correction not only gives you better natural colours, but also restores lost detail and image sharpness too!!.

May I suggest you take a very basic course in Photoshop online..like lynda.com..its $25.00 a month.. you learn at your own pace, unlimited time if you don't like that method, you can purchase their learning DVD , if you don't like that either, you can learn live online directly from the teachers. Consider it an investment it getting better images, less frustration and more out of your equipment.

 

Cheers, JRM

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