The blog & portfolio of Matthew J. Rogers

Posts tagged ‘photoshop’

moss_final

I’m coming up on one year of my foray into “real” photography (that is, putting some effort into my shots rather than just random point-and-shoot), and I wanted to share an experience I had that demonstrated the importance of spending quality time post-processing your photos. One of my pictures that got little attention at first started getting a lot more looks, comments, group invites, and awards once I knew what I was doing in post and spent some time tweaking it.

Until relatively recently, I hadn’t really done much post-processing work — I’d pull the shots off my memory card, maybe do a little tweaking to the exposure if I had under- or over-exposed, maybe crop a little, but that was about it. But as I’ve spent more time trying to learn about photography, both from the pros and from some talented friends, I realized in addition to developing “the eye” in the field, I needed to be developing my skills back at my desk, long after the shot. I have plenty of experience designing user interfaces for web sites, but little with enhancing photographs. Once I started putting some effort into post, some of my shots really started to pop much more than they used to. One great example of this is my mossy ravine photograph.
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No people

How many times have you seen something that had the potential to be a really great picture, but there were just too many people in the way? More times than I can remember, personally. As it turns out, there’s a way to get that shot.

I came across this really cool Photoshop tip the other day while listening to the TWiP (This Week in Photography) podcast. One of the podcast regulars, Fred Johnson, put a little screencast up on his site about how to remove people (or any other non-stationary object) from a photograph. Well, technically, a series of photographs. Basically, take several shots of a scene with the camera in the same location (obviously a tripod would be best, but Photoshop can align the images if necessary), load them into a single layer, and then use Photoshop’s Layer > Smart Objects > Stack Mode > Median. This analyzes the image set and removes the delta pixels, leaving you with a people-less picture. Very cool technique, and something I’m sure a lot of people will find useful.

Screencast: Removing crowds with Photoshop