Here we are in mid-September and Fall is almost upon us. Fall is definitely one of my favorite seasons to take photographs of the beautiful autumn foliage with all the rich colors and of course, the cooler weather can be nice also.
1. Under-exposed 1 ¾ stops |
2. Under-exposed 1 ¼ stops |
3. Under-exposed ½ stops |
4. Neutral, / As Shot |
5. Over exposed ½ stop |
Even with some good pre-planning and some detailed maps, I
still had to find these bridges. When I finally found them, I still had other
obstacles to deal with, like the weather and the sun. I really didn’t know
where the sun would be falling on the bridges or how much work it would be to
get to a decent look-out for the shots. As much as I wanted to get some decent shots, my main idea was to take notes of the time
of day, month of the year, where the sun was falling and how difficult it was finding
the bridges so that I could make better plans for a future trip.
6. Over exposed 1 ¼ stop |
Well, that was in 2007 and I still haven’t made that other
trip yet, but while going through some of my photos recently, I got the idea to
run a couple of them through Lightroom/Enfuse to see what I could get. A couple months ago, in July 2015, I did
another post on creating your own HDR shots from a single image and that’s what
I did here using Lightroom/Enfuse.
The bridge in these photos is the Blair Bridge, located about 15
miles north of Lake Winnipesaukee near Campton NH.
Unfortunately, I got to this bridge about 1pm and
the light wasn’t the best for getting a decent shot straight out of the camera.
Plus, I remembered I had a pretty tough time climbing through the woods and briers
getting down to water level to a place I could get a decent view that day. I wasn’t about to lug my tripod and my main
DSLR down to the water level, so my photos of this bridge were all single shots taken with a point and shoot
camera and were all shot in JPEG mode for some reason?
7. Merged Copy |
Because I didn’t carry my tripod, I didn’t shoot
any bracketed shots that day either. In my original photo I was just trying to
get some detail under the bridge without blowing out the sky too much. I knew
if I didn’t clip too much info, I could
play around with it afterwards. Here are the steps I took to get my final image
seen below and a larger version at the top of this post.
8. Final Image (also at top of post) |
I started out by making 5 copies of my original photo
( Image # 4 ) and give them each copy a different
name. If you don’t rename them it will
confuse Lightroom. This gives me a total of 6 shots which I then opened up in
Camera RAW to start my tweaking. In the first three shots I was trying to get more detail in the clouds and sky. Starting
from the top of this post, my first shot ( Image # 1 ) is underexposed 1 ¾ stop.
The next was
underexposed 1 ¼ ( Image # 2 ) the third was a ½ stop under ( Image # 3 ) the next was my original shot ( Image # 4 ) and the
last two are over-exposed by a ½ stop ( Image # 5 ) and 1 ¼ stops ( Image # 6 ). I then imported them into Lightroom and ran
them through Lightroom/Enfuse which gave me a TIFF ( Image # 7 ) As you’ll notice, the merged copy needs a
little TLC.
For my finishing touches, I then take this image into Camera
Raw where I boosted my contrast, added a little fill light to the shadows on the trees,
popped a little Clarity on it and then sharpened it a little to get the final image (Image # 8) also shown
at the top of this post. What do you think?
With some practice this whole process only took about 10 minutes total, not too bad huh? Hopefully
this tip might help you sometime in a pinch.
As always, keep shooting and have some fun!