"Win" I think is in this dialog between photographers, by comparing own methods and effects with others. I think the whole idea of this club is a confrontation of opinions, a digital global village equivalent of a Montmartre cafe. (Only everyone pays for own wine^ thank you. I don't know if the most "likes" is the indicator or if there is actually a poll made or if we all win equally just for participating. :mrgreen:
Very intense. Like HDR.LR3 (flatten) -> SilverFX -> LR3. Is my usual for B&W. Then I apply subtle changes with the image in LR3 depending.
1) Lightroom 3 -> flatten out the image. Bring everything neutral (since we are working with B&W). Also correct distortion to keep the tree upright which means crop.
2) SilverFX -> high contrast full structure to start. Apply a red filter and some adjustment to bring the leaves back. Pure black on print always looks "unnatural". As such, I always convert to B&W leaving a tiny little bit of sepia.
3) Back in LR3, Soften the entire photo with a reduction of clarity and and pulling back contrast.
4) Mask out the bridge.... apply a little contrast back and curves adjustment.
5) Gradient... darken the bottom half of the frame without impacting the sky.
6) Tiny bit of vignette. If you can tell, its too much.
OK. I understand your point.Appreciate the critique but an open discussion generally influences the shootout and voting from being completely unbiased and more towards the preferences being expressed. Furthermore it influences the direction of those applicants that have yet to process their entry.
In the other shootout I have participated we encouraged those who wish to go all out and take the image to as far far as they want to a or remain as subtle in their processing. It was fun... sometimes silly... but we all experimented and discovered together.
If a bunch of people express they prefer more subtle natural look, some may hesitate to submit submission counter even though it may be more truthful to their artistic intent.
Just something to consider
Just an observation: It appears many go for the #29 red filter look when it comes to B&W conversions
OK. I understand your point.
I can't the same way you guys do. I am not a digital, can only comment on final effects, not the process. Maybe after posting time is over.OK. I understand your point.
Certainly... what I posted doesn't mean you shouldn't participate at all....
Have some fun with the image and post an entry.