realaqu
07-30-2005, 04:23 PM
Hi, All,
this picture is authorized by owner, I finished my practice and need your kind inputs on how to improve it.
thanks
Realaqu
Kraellin
07-30-2005, 04:58 PM
nice job!
i would say the next thing is a simple crop. you've a lot of space around the main focus of the picture, the woman. this makes her seem less significant, smaller. she's the main picture; bring her forward.
Craig
realaqu
07-30-2005, 05:49 PM
Oh, that is right, I didn't even think about this when I finished it.
Thansk a lot
Realaqu
skipc
07-31-2005, 08:54 AM
On my calibated mac monitor the face and hands appear un-naturally light. It could just be the windows/mac thing in save for web, or the result of too much gamma—the bench also looks artifically light. If it looks ok on your monitor it's fine...skip
Gary Richardson
07-31-2005, 10:15 AM
Hi Realaqu,
Nice job with the colour flare removal.
Just a note on Craig's idea to crop. Be careful not to crop too tight if the picture quality is not there. By cropping you are in effect enlarging your image, and this will also emphasise any faults in the image.
Gary.
realaqu
07-31-2005, 10:45 AM
Thanks for the tips, It looks better after cropping.
I checked the picture on my Mac, it does look different.
Realaqu
skipc
07-31-2005, 11:25 AM
This was the SFW thing I was talking about. Which ever platform you use it will always be wrong for someone :)
Flora
07-31-2005, 01:47 PM
Hi,
realaqu,
Great job on the leaks ... :thumbsup:
In my opinion, the image laks a bit of 'life' .... the girls face is a bit pale and faded making the background vegetation seem overpowering ...
I just added a bit of consistency, sharpness and color to the girl's face ans used the Lens blur on the background following this great Tutorial (http://retouchpro.com/tutorials/?m=show&id=167) to make the girl 'stand out' more.
Hi skipc,
Welcome to RetouchPRO! :pleased:
Yep, you are absolutely right about Windows and Mac Gamma difference!!
From Photoshop Help file: The gamma value of a computer monitor affects how light or dark an image looks in a web browser. Because Windows systems use a gamma of 2.2, images look darker on Windows than on Mac OS systems, which are normally set to a gamma of 1.8. You can preview how your images will look on systems with different gamma values and make gamma adjustments to the image to compensate. Activating a preview option does not affect final image output.
Choose one of the following options by using the Save For Web dialog box Preview pop‑up menu (Photoshop) or by choosing an option from the View > Preview menu (ImageReady).
Uncompensated Color Makes no adjustments to image gamma. Uncompensated Color is the default setting.
Standard Windows Color Displays an adjustment based on the default Windows gamma.
Standard Macintosh Color Displays an adjustment based on the default Macintosh gamma.
Use Document Color Profile or Use Embedded Color Profile Adjusts the gamma to match any attached document color profile in a color-managed document.
realaqu
07-31-2005, 06:23 PM
Hi, Flora,
Great job as usual and thanks for the tutorial, it might be my monitor's problem, your picture looks a little greenish.
According to everyone's suggestion, I made some changes on this picture.
Realaqu
Cameraken
08-02-2005, 08:18 AM
I know this has been done. I was just playing.
Ken