Author Topic: Canyon Conumdrum  (Read 13530 times)

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Offline Greg Groess

Canyon Conumdrum
« on: April 08, 2007, 07:32:05 PM »
Mike has asked me to shoot the image from a canyon that cannot be improved in LAB. 
I know you all love a good challenge. 
My best result is in RGB so far....
This image was shot at sunset it is a lengthy exposure....

Give it a shot...

Greg
« Last Edit: April 08, 2007, 07:38:36 PM by Greg Groess »
Greg Groess

Perception Depends Upon Opening Ones Eyes....

Offline themightyzog

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #1 on: April 09, 2007, 07:29:34 AM »
I think you need a course in exposures!! - only joking Greg.

This is not the day to post a challenge and say Lab is impossible.

Just a quick fiddle only in Lab - I'll try later in the week when I have time as this is persumably not the effect you are looking for!

Chris

Offline ianbowie

  • Curvemeister 101 January 2007
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Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #2 on: April 09, 2007, 07:46:04 AM »
Greg,

My shot at it in Lab only.

Ian

Offline Greg Groess

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #3 on: April 09, 2007, 10:06:59 AM »
The rock in the foreground is too blue.....Try it in RGB and set a reasonable neutral and you will see what I mean...

Mike's challenge to me was..."go on vacation and try to shoot an image of a canyon that cannot be improved in LAB."

90+ percent of the images I shot last week can indeed be improved in LAB...I found this one to be a real problem child...I will post my RGB later this week....

Greg
Greg Groess

Perception Depends Upon Opening Ones Eyes....

Offline ianbowie

  • Curvemeister 101 January 2007
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Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #4 on: April 09, 2007, 11:41:22 AM »
Greg,

I see what you mean ..... second try.....

Offline derekfountain

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #5 on: April 09, 2007, 12:17:40 PM »
The rock in the foreground is too blue.....Try it in RGB and set a reasonable neutral and you will see what I mean...

Mike's challenge to me was..."go on vacation and try to shoot an image of a canyon that cannot be improved in LAB."

90+ percent of the images I shot last week can indeed be improved in LAB...I found this one to be a real problem child...I will post my RGB later this week....

Greg


What are the characteristics of an image that make it unsuitable for correction in Lab mode?

Offline Greg Groess

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #6 on: April 09, 2007, 02:24:46 PM »
Well for me it has been the fact that no matter what I do to it I cannot make it look like it should.  I cannot get rid of the yellow green cast when I set a single neutral. 

It can be improved but When I use RGB I get much... much better results.

Greg
Greg Groess

Perception Depends Upon Opening Ones Eyes....

Offline derekfountain

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #7 on: April 09, 2007, 03:02:56 PM »
Well for me it has been the fact that no matter what I do to it I cannot make it look like it should.  I cannot get rid of the yellow green cast when I set a single neutral. 


Here's my fix. I also couldn't get anything decent looking from lab mode. Looking closely at the image with the aid of the hue clock, you can see there's a blue cast which gets deeper as the tones get darker. I think that's the key; the CM help text says that RGB is good at fixing problems where a colour cast is associated with a change in brightness, and that's exactly what we have here. I can't claim to understand the theory why that's true, but the curve shown below does get a decent result.

After the colour fix with RGB mode, I added another conventional pass in Lab mode to lift the brightness and increase the saturation. It's actually possible to lift the brightness to the point where it looks like a daylight shot, but since it was a long exposure sunset shot I tried to keep it a bit dark and saturated, like perhaps the view appeared at the time.

Offline Greg Groess

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #8 on: April 09, 2007, 04:53:55 PM »
Derek,
That is where I got it in RGB as well...I like this one so far....

Greg
Greg Groess

Perception Depends Upon Opening Ones Eyes....

Offline themightyzog

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #9 on: April 10, 2007, 01:58:54 AM »
I think that is absolutely excellent Derek,

I'm puzzled by one thing - I tried to copy your curves to see what was going on, and I noticed that I could not get the histograms to be anything like yours (see below), especially the red and green channels - so I guess you did at least 3 passes.  The first to lighten, then RGB, then Lab - is that right?

I had this problem on the course where I could not get my histograms to look like other people's - Mike suggested the difference between precise mode being on/off.

Does anybody else have this problem with histogram representation?

Thanks
Chris

Offline derekfountain

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #10 on: April 10, 2007, 04:52:14 AM »
I'm puzzled by one thing - I tried to copy your curves to see what was going on, and I noticed that I could not get the histograms to be anything like yours (see below), especially the red and green channels - so I guess you did at least 3 passes.  The first to lighten, then RGB, then Lab - is that right?


No, 2 passes, of which 90% of the image correction happened in the first RGB pass. I put a shadow point in the darkest rock at the very left of the image and a neutral on the large whiteish clump of rock in the foreground. I couldn't find a highlight. I then moved the neutral around a bit to find a sweet spot I was happy with - there's no 'right' answer here I don't think. That was the basic correction which got the blue cast out and the reds and yellows looking as I wanted them. On top of that I manually added the slight boost in the RGB curve highlights. From there I had another pass in Lab mode to boost the lightness and saturation.

I can honestly say I hardly ever look at the histogram. I find the direct feedback from the image, together with the stand alone Hue clock, give me all the information I ever use.

Offline themightyzog

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #11 on: April 10, 2007, 06:27:14 AM »
I am absolutely lost with trying to understand the difference between the histogram representations.

If I follow your curves and then Lab adjust, I can get your rendition Derek, but what ever I tried I could not load an image that gave angthing near your channels.

So either you are opening the image in a colour profile I never use (I tried nought, RGB & sRGB), but surely profiles will make no difference to a histogram?
Or the different versions of CM show different results.

I know some people do not use the histogram at all - is this because it is just so unreliable I wonder?

Here is an image of CM and Reindeer's idea of the blue channel - PS itself was useless as the top of the peaks were out of range!

Mike, Greg - can you throw any light (!) on the problem?

Thanks
Chris

Offline Greg Groess

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #12 on: April 10, 2007, 06:33:25 AM »
I think you need a course in exposures!!


Quote
I think that is absolutely excellent Derek,


I see how this is going to play now....sure.....i get it....

I love to parse sentences.....LOL

Good job both of you.....
Greg
P.S. the histogram technology is Mikes bag...I'm gonna let him explain it to me as well...



« Last Edit: April 10, 2007, 06:37:51 AM by Greg Groess »
Greg Groess

Perception Depends Upon Opening Ones Eyes....

Offline themightyzog

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #13 on: April 10, 2007, 06:47:23 AM »
re histograms - I did a little more testing and they come out differently depending on the mode of the image before CM is opened!

But still the peaks do not agree with other representations.

I would have thought that it is simple matter to add up the values to get a histgoram, but something else must be going on!

What's the answer Mike?

Chris

Offline derekfountain

Re: Canyon Conumdrum
« Reply #14 on: April 10, 2007, 07:47:01 AM »
What's the answer Mike?


Perhaps more to the point, what's the question? :) What are you trying to achieve with the histogram? The only reason I ever look at a histogram in Photoshop is to see whether there's an empty area at one or both ends, which tells me the image isn't using the entire tonal range. I always use the histogram on my DSLR to check exposure, and I use it in RAW conversion, again to check exposure. But once in Photoshop I rarely pay it any attention.

Under the CurveMeister settings, there's an option to turn the histogram on/off. What happens to your workflow if you uncheck that box? It's not a flippant question! What are you getting (or trying to get) from the histogram that I'm missing? (Apart from hassle and trouble?)