Simon Bradshaw (
major_clanger) wrote2013-06-16 06:34 pm
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Processed Cows
We went for a wander around Sutton Park today; now that we have a car we're doing more exploring around the outskirts of Birmingham, and we quickly discovered this wonderful great chunk of countryside within Birmingham's suburban sprawl.
I had my DSLR with me and tried to get some interesting shots of a small herd of cows we met. I've done my best with a few minutes' work in Photoshop to bring the picture a bit more to life and I'd be interested in comments on the processed version vs the original :

Left: original, taken with Canon 400D and Canon 17-55 f/2.8, 1/200s at f/7.1, ISO 100, shot through neutral density graduated filter. Shot in RAW and small exposure tweak added.
Right: slightly realigned and cropped, layer overlays used to boost contrast and saturation.
I had my DSLR with me and tried to get some interesting shots of a small herd of cows we met. I've done my best with a few minutes' work in Photoshop to bring the picture a bit more to life and I'd be interested in comments on the processed version vs the original :


Left: original, taken with Canon 400D and Canon 17-55 f/2.8, 1/200s at f/7.1, ISO 100, shot through neutral density graduated filter. Shot in RAW and small exposure tweak added.
Right: slightly realigned and cropped, layer overlays used to boost contrast and saturation.
no subject
A lower camera position, so that one or more of the subjects break the horizon, is always worth a try; especially when you have a 'false horizon' like the grass/trees boundary in your shot.
I'm not sure what the best colour treatment would be: UV filters are the limit of my ability here. If yoir editor package has an artificial UV sky filter, play with it a bit.
A final note: images with a natural division into three always make an interesting composition. Yours has one in a horizontal banding of grass-trees-sky, which always looks little odd and unsettling: great fun when the subject's looking straight at you, dead centre of the shot. Or vertically-centred. Or a cow.
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- there were other cows rather thoughtlessly cluttering up the scene from other angles.
- I was trying to keep some nearby cars out of shot.
- we were meant to be having a walk and I didn't want to spend too long being Arty whilst
Also, White Cow was being rather awkward; kept on hiding behind Brown's ears.
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Were you standing when you took it? Getting the camera closer to the ground might have given a better composition; the cows and the sky are a little too far apart.
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[EDIT TO PREVIOUS COMMENT]
These are opinions, not criticisms: I like the shot.
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It also rewards an afficionado of Elizabethan pubs.
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Lovely composition.
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Did you try adjusting the white balance? If not, that might be worth a go.
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(I forgot to say this before, but I love how the foremost cow is looking grumpily at the camera. The clouds in the sky seem to go with the mood there.)