Thanks,
Mark. Well, I did typical processing including adjusting the levels, contrast,
etc. But after I made the anaglyph (which seem to always turn out too dark for
me) I did brighten primarily the mid tones, too. Maybe as a result of all that I
went a little too far? I did make a version of one of them with "HDR" processing
- and attached it for comparison.
Greg
From: "mark sroufe markgambier(-at-)yahoo.com
[anaglyphs]" <anaglyphs(-at-)yahoogroups.com>
To: "anaglyphs(-at-)yahoogroups.com"
<anaglyphs(-at-)yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Friday, October 24, 2014 12:33
PM
Subject: Re: [Anaglyphs]
Molly, Using a Flash
Nice shots, Greg. Did you use HDR processing in
PS?
--
Mark
On Thursday, October 23, 2014 9:18 PM,
"Greg Hjellen greghj(-at-)yahoo.com [anaglyphs]" <anaglyphs(-at-)yahoogroups.com>
wrote:
Today I decided to start
better educating myself in flash, which I haven't used much.
Our cocker spaniel, Molly,
was handy and became my subject for today's experiment. Here is how she spends
a rainy day. In these shots she is on 1.) "her" chair, and 2.) her spot
on the couch. You can see she is very spoiled! We at least cover the furniture
in an attempt to protect it.
I used tape to block off
all but a very small portion of my W1's flash output, allowing only enough
output to trigger an external flash - which was located off to the side and
pointed up to bounce much of it's light off the ceiling. In both setups, it
was a bit tricky to position the slave flash such that it would simultaneously
1.) sense enough of the W1's "blocked" flash to trigger it, 2.) throw its
light in the desired direction, AND 3.) not produce bad flare in the W1's
lenses (the W1 seemed very susceptible).
W1, external slaved flash,
SPM, PSE
Greg