Good Friend of mine.

onesix

TPF Noob!
Joined
Apr 2, 2009
Messages
53
Reaction score
0
Location
Colorado Springs
Can others edit my Photos
Photos OK to edit
Hello all... I understand that this shot does have a very harsh shadow across the face. The sun came out unexpectedly and I did not have my sun shade/filter. Is there anything I can do to fix it?

Chris

DSC_1422small.jpg
 
Feel free to play around with it. So I can learn... please let me what steps you took to fix it.

Thanks
 
There wouldn't be a way to completely rid the shadows and make it look as if there was soft even lighting. Try a little bit of dodging but it won't be 100% probably. Sorry if that is what you wanted. If you can try again with better lighting and you should get better results. That smilie in your sig kept messing with me ha.
tj
 
N.gif
Harsh shadow but cute girl :)
 
The framing is good, its just that the picture is a little overexposed, so eithe on the camer drop the EV to like -1ish or through PP lower it!
 
Sorry, I've never heard of PS4, unless you mean Adobe Photoshop CS4, or Photoshop Elements 4 (PSE4).
 
Hello all... I understand that this shot does have a very harsh shadow across the face. The sun came out unexpectedly and I did not have my sun shade/filter. Is there anything I can do to fix it?

Chris

DSC_1422small.jpg

DSC_1422small.jpg


Being a reduced size JPEG there's not much that can be done. hopefully you have a RAW capture so the blown highlights can be recovered.

First I opened it in ACR as a 16 bit file and played with the Recovery and Exposure sliders. Since it's not the RAW file, recovery didn't help much with the blown areas in her hair, cheeks, chin, lower neck, shoulders and arms.

In the Photoshop work space open ed a new layer, set the blending mode to soft light and checked the box to fill the layer with 50% gray. I set the Dodge tool to Modtones, 58% and checked the "Protect Tones" box. I then dodged with a soft edged brush in the shadow areas. I then made a Curves adjustment layer and set a custom contrast curve.

Lastly I returned the image to 8-bit mode, flattened the image, created the mat and frame, flattened again and resaved at the highest quality.

You didn't ask for critique but the pose is not flattering. You need to make sure your subjects are sitting tall and are leaning slightly forward at the waist. Shoulders should be at about a 45 degree angle to the image sensor and their weight on the back foot if standing. When they are sitting it's nice if you can get the front foot up and get the shoulder line off level a little. Check into the 3-1-2 pose and the 2-2-1 pose. Most portraits of an individuals are done with the camera in the portrait orientation, which is how I cropped the image. Ideally, you want an eye on a rule-of-thirds or goldern ratio power point which can't be done with the landscape orientation.
 
Last edited:
it's overexposed, how about convert it B/W?

DSC_1422small.jpg
 

Most reactions

Back
Top