Curious about something ... when I look at really good landscape photos (especially water ones), they seem to have a very soft, calming feeling about them.
When I edit my photos, the end result sometimes ends up the very opposite of this - it seems very harsh and grainy and I seem to lose a lot of detail. Is this because of overediting? I've noticed that it occurs more when I increase clarity in lightroom and when I use HDR mode and increase detail. Is that a no-no for landscape photos?
Hi, I shoot weddings for my sins, but my hobby is landscapes, and like you, yes, the detailed sharp version of an image is sometimes distracting from the 'mood' of a slightly softer edit. In fact I recently tried a technique from a book I bought a year ago, for this very thing. I assume you have photoshop, but if not, I will still lay out the method for the benefit of other readers.
First, open the image in photoshop, and create two duplicate layers.
With one of the layers, make an 'adjustment layer' and choose 'channel mixer' from the flyout menu. When the dialogue box opens, as a result, there is a 'monochrome' checkbox. Check it and do nothing else yet apart from ok. Depending on which version of photoshop, alter the opacity slider (either on the duplicate layer, or with more recent photoshops, on the ADJUSTMENT layer) and make it 50%.
Now make the other duplicate layer active, and choose FILTER / Blur / gaussian blur, and then set the pixel size to 30 and click ok. In the Layers panel, set the opacity of this layer to 50% also.
Having done this, now we need to make sure the layers are properly arranged. The original image should be last on the list, the adjustment layer in the middle, and the blurred layer at the very top.
See what you think of the result. But remember, from here on, you can adjust both the opacity of the monochrome, by moving the slider on the adjustment layer, and you can vary the opacity of the blur effect by moving the opacity on the blur layer, until you get the result you want.
This won't solve the issue with every image, but there are a number of my landscape shots which don't feel right when fully sharp, which benefit from this treatment. Especially by later experimentation with the sliders.
When done, you can output the image (you may need to flatten the image in the layers box if using version CS4 or earlier) AND save the work in progress as a photoshop PSD so that you can return to this point and move the sliders again etc.
Hope that helps with some of your stuff.
Ross