Great job! As with your other videos, great production quality and clear concise dialog to explain what is going on. And thank you for NOT relying on stupid, loud attention-getting audio.
Christian, You have achieved a wonderful conduct in creating the dreamy scenery, which is by increasing shadows and blacks while reducing exposure, highlights and dehaze. Your inspiration of darkening the foreground and of the strong leading lines by clarity is remarkable. I learned a lot from you about how to treat the images of forest. I am so grateful to you! Thank you so much.
I’ve learned a lot watching your videos. You make editing look easy. I noticed you have the TK actions.I’d love to see some videos explaining how you use them in your work. They can get a little confusing. Thanks..
Thanks for the comment, I have the camera set up on my tripod (vertically) then just shoot the panorama while focusing somewhere in the upper third of the frame. I miught do a on-location-tutorial for photos like this soon
Hi Christian! Nice video as always 👏 I have a question - why are you straightening the trees in PS and not with guided lines straightening in LR? Better results or habit? Thanks!
Hey, thanks for the comment! Not sure if straightening in LR would work here because it would skew the other side, but to be honest, I forgot about the transform tools of LR in that case, could have gave it a try
Do you have an instruction to setup the color profile drop-down menu you typically show at the beginning of your videos? I am running Lr 13.4 on a Mac and cannot figure out how to do this.
I dont have a video on that, I always assumed the profile dorp down looks the same for everyone whne working on a raw file! But you can click on browse in the drop down menu and there in the big profiles menu you can set different profiles as favourites (little star icon in the upper right corner) so they show up in the drop down menu
Photo processing is a rather subjective process, but in my opinion the end result was unbalanced. For example, a tree running right along the edge of the left side of the frame upsets the balance. With the glow of the sun, it was possible to further brighten it using a larger radial filter and raise the white point and black point a little.