turlough: purple crocuses ((mcr) hear you sing the praise)
turlough ([personal profile] turlough) wrote in [community profile] shutterspeed2011-04-16 09:05 pm

scaffolding in b/w

This is the first time I've conciously thought about what something would look like in b/w while I was taking the pictures. Interesting experience.

2011-04-16

2011-04-16

Nikon Coolpix 775, auto, macro

PS Is it "cheating" to use a b/w gradient map in Photoshop to transform a colour photo into b/w instead of just using the turn-into-grayscale function? It feels like cheating but the result is so much better I still do it.
holyoutlaw: (Default)

[personal profile] holyoutlaw 2011-04-16 08:23 pm (UTC)(link)
There are probably a couple dozen ways to get a color photo to B&W in Photoshop, whichever way gets results you prefer. I've seen the gradient method in a Scott Kelby book, so you're good to go.
sasha_feather: Retro-style poster of skier on pluto.   (Default)

[personal profile] sasha_feather 2011-04-18 12:34 am (UTC)(link)
There is something really captivating about that scaffolding shot.
darkemeralds: Crows high in the branches of a bare tree, caption COUNTING (Counting Crows)

[personal profile] darkemeralds 2011-04-18 06:19 pm (UTC)(link)
It's only cheating if you believe there is some magical rule about not doing it, I guess. These results are beautiful. I frequently post-process my pictures, for this comm and elsewhere, to bring out some element, or liven them up. Where does one draw the line? I virtually always straighten my horizons (because apparently I see crookedly or something and can't take a level picture to save my life). I crop. I push contrast and brightness a lot of the time because the world I live in is often bereft of direct sunlight.

I correct color because my camera sees blues and purples very differently than my eyes do.

Then there's the sheer art of just messing with the potential in a photo: solarizing it down to its structural essence, shoving the saturation way up just for fun.

I have an inexpensive point and shoot camera that doesn't do within its little box body all the things I wish it could. So I do those things outside its body.

Heh. Long answer! Anyway, isn't it interesting how beautiful things which are inherently rather ugly can become in black and white? Both the scaffolding and the rotted timbers are wonderful.
rikes: (The moment at hand)

[personal profile] rikes 2011-04-19 12:32 pm (UTC)(link)
These are both fantastic! I love the lines the buildings and scaffoldings make in the first one, and it's pretty cool to have a picture taken from closer to the "ceiling" than the "floor" for a change, if that makes sense. :)