Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/05/16

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Subject: [Leica] 200mm test
From: passaro.vince at gmail.com (Vince Passaro)
Date: Sun, 16 May 2010 10:59:01 -0400
References: <AANLkTilbK3EnpzZp0JIe6iqUaRXlVB-0X98U7g5duwLo@mail.gmail.com> <4BEFFD2B.50005@gmx.de>

Douglas
I'll llook into all that. Thanks for the advice.
V

On Sun, May 16, 2010 at 10:11 AM, Douglas Sharp <douglas.sharp at 
gmx.de>wrote:

> Vince,
>
> First off:
>
> there's a good, and reasonably easy, trick in PS to give most photos a kick
> in the right direction before doing any more complex stuff.
>
> Load your image into PS (I have CS2, but I think this applies even to
> Elements)
>
> Go to Adjustments
> Go to Levels
>
> When the levels box is open, click on the white eyedropper (right) and move
> it to what you think should be white (the insulators for instance on the
> full frame shot, or the white rectangle behind the tree between the groups
> of people in the third)
>
> Click on the white bit you think is right
>
> Then take the black eyedropper (left) and do the same for what you think
> should be black (the triangular window under the roof or a part of the
> clothing of the woman in the left group of people)
>
> You'll find that the balance, contrast and brightness now looks much
> improved.
>
> Secondly:
>
> There is also room for improvement in the sharpening, it is possible to get
> a decent rendition of the diagonal mesh behind the people - I use a PS
> plug-in called Focus Magic - it's pretty much one of the best there is - 
> but
> it can still be improved in PS.
>
> Be careful though, it is very easy to ruin a shot with too much sharpening.
>
> Another plug-in you could play around with is a thing called "Auto Enhance"
> from DCETools or their "ColorCast Remover"  - they often work wonders.
>
> If you want something with a more intuitive approach, I think (and many
> will agree) that Adobe Lightroom is the way to go. It does almost all of 
> the
> steps you generally need in PS, but they are all shown in one panel with 
> all
> the sliders and buttons. Since I bought it, CS2 only gets used for really
> complicated stuff with layers and the like.
>
> Cheers
> Douglas
>
>
> On 16.05.2010 07:16, Vince Passaro wrote:
>
>> Dr. Ted I know you're out there -- a savage hound on the dark moor -- but
>> I
>> want to ask all you others, do you remember a discussion thread about a
>> month or so back on the Nikon 200 f/4 prime? As I recollect Jim Laird (?)
>> was constructing a shoulder brace for use with this lens. Doug advised
>> him.
>> Several others kibbutzed, including me, to the effect that the lens is
>> quite
>> light.  Well today it was so lovely I was testing my 200mm lenses out the
>> front window. We live up the hill from a park with a big pond in it and
>> the
>> living room overlooks it. Tested Nikkor AF 70-210 1:4-5.6 D;  Nikkor
>> 80-200
>> 1:4.5 AI-S ; and the Nikkor 200 1:4 AI-S as previously mentioned.  All at
>> F8.  RAW. ISO 400 because I was too dumb to remember to change it and
>> since
>> I used to shoot Tri-X almost exclusively I tend to leave it at 400 most of
>> the time and not think about it. Roughly 1/500th of a second though this
>> varied a little because the metering on the D40x is a little too bright so
>> with the AF-D lens -- the only one with which the D40 can provide metering
>> and aperture priority -- one keeps the EV adjusted to -.7.
>>
>> I swear to God Dr. Ted I was thinking about Leicas the whole time. I was
>> thinking about selling the new kid -- he was right there with me and damn
>> cute -- so I could put a down payment on an M9.
>>
>> Anyway the 200/4 knocked my socks off.  Here are three images from one
>> shot:
>> The first just a JPEG straight up from the RAW file. The second cropped
>> and
>> enlarged almost to 100 percent and slightly adjusted in PS Camera Raw. The
>> third cropped the same but with more work fixing the highlights, working
>> out
>> a bit of fringing, color adjustment, sharpening, etc.
>>
>> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/toast+eatin_+bog+man/nikon+200mm+f4/
>>
>> Opinions, criticisms and advice most welcome. Particularly welcome is
>> advice
>> on the processing. Everything I know how to do is in camera raw. I have
>> hardly tried PS itself yet.
>>
>> Vince
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>>
>>
>
>
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>


In reply to: Message from passaro.vince at gmail.com (Vince Passaro) ([Leica] 200mm test)
Message from douglas.sharp at gmx.de (Douglas Sharp) ([Leica] 200mm test)