Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/12/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ah yes, I recognize Memorial Drive next to the Charles River anywhere!!! I think perhaps you are hitting several problems: - You need to need open up your exposure. It's lopping off the highlight at the top so your brilliant white-gold is slightly muddy yellow. I guess bracketing will help. - you may be hitting the dynamic range limit of the film - the scanner may be auto-exposing it incorrectly (same problem as the first one except at the scanner side). I ALWAYS turn off auto-exposure of the scanner. After all, if I am trying so hard to exposure it right in the camera, why shouldn't I then let the scanner muck it up for me? At 04:50 PM 12/5/2004, Richard S. Taylor wrote: >As I turned onto Memorial Drive in Cambridge last week the sycamores along >the drive were glowing white-gold in the mid-afternoon sunlight. I >quickly parked and took pictures. The results were disappointing to say >the least. I've posted one example here: > ><http://gallery.leica-users.org/PICKS/21_0021> > >Photographic qualities of the picture aside, I wonder if any of you might >have any thoughts on what I might have done to improve the rendition of >the glowing trees that I saw with my eyes. There seems to be an exposure >issue here since the highlights look blown out but would it have been >better on a slower film, or is there a scanning problem, or something else? > >This photo isn't even close to the image I had in my head. Manipulation in >Photoshop to darken the image overall helps but isn't really the >solution. The posted picture is unmanipulated and uncropped. > >M7, 50mm 2.8 Elmarit (Current), Portra 400NC, f11.0 at the shutter speed >set by the camera. > // richard (This email is for mailing lists. To reach me directly, please use richard at imagecraft.com)