Aamir Zakaria Photography

Fine Art Photography

menu
  • Photos
  • Store
  • Blog
  • Contact Me

Archives

August 14, 2014 by aamir.zakaria@gmail.com

Paris Photography Adventure — Day 11

It’s day 11 of my Paris pho­tog­ra­phy adven­ture, and although I did­n’t make it to Mont­martre, I did snap a few shots near the Opera house.    The street lay­out in Paris is unique in that there are many cen­tral hubs from which roads radi­ate.   It’s impres­sive to see but hard to cap­ture on film.  I used my iPhone to get this panora­ma, and you can see all 6 of the radi­at­ing roads in one image.

wpid1511-photo-2-2.jpg

You can see in the upper right hand cor­ner how the fad­ing sun­set was just catch­ing the top of two of the buildings.

I did­n’t like how dark the low­er part of this pic­ture was, so I used a grad­u­at­ed fil­ter in Light­room to light­en it up.

wpid1509-photo-2.jpg

I use grad­u­at­ed fil­ters a lot.  They are quick and easy ways to selec­tive­ly light­en or dark­en from the edges.  You can also use these fil­ters to grad­u­al­ly adjust oth­er para­me­ters such as con­trast, sat­u­ra­tion, etc.

You can also see how I cropped out the bot­tom por­tion of the image to focus more atten­tion on the build­ings.  The side­walk and the entrance to the Metro were doing noth­ing for this image.  How­ev­er, I still want­ed to leave some of it show­ing to pro­vide a point of ref­er­ence.  Crop­ping is anoth­er pow­er­ful tool.  The most impor­tant aspect of pho­tog­ra­phy is com­po­si­tion, and crop­ping lets you opti­mize that in post-processing.

Final­ly, I added some HDR to give it a lit­tle more punch.

wpid1514-photo-2_HDR_1.jpg

HDR works best when you have 3 RAW files tak­en with dif­fer­ent expo­sures, but you can use HDR even with 1 JPEG file.  I shoot exclu­sive­ly in RAW on my DSLR, but the iPhone only cap­tures JPEG.  The advan­tage of JPEG is it uses less mem­o­ry, but the dis­ad­van­tage is that your cam­era is throw­ing valu­able infor­ma­tion.  The cam­era cap­tures 12 bits of infor­ma­tion, but a JPEG file only keeps 8.  When you set your cam­era to shoot in JPEG, the cam­era decides which 4 bits of infor­ma­tion to throw away.  If you shoot in RAW for­mat, you can make that deci­sion your­self.  This is impor­tant for HDR, where you can take full advan­tage of that extra information.

Nev­er­the­less, even with 1 JPEG image, you can use HDR by cre­at­ing two addi­tion­al copies of the file and then adjust­ing the expo­sures +1 and ‑1 EV in the com­put­er.  You can then send all three of these files to your HDR pro­gram.  You’re still miss­ing quite a bit of data, but it’s bet­ter than nothing.

Here’s the opera house itself (enhanced with HDR):

wpid1522-M9A0970_HDR.jpg

Because I had my 70–200 mm super tele­pho­to lens, I was able to zoom in close­ly to the gold­en fig­ures, which were cap­tur­ing my atten­tion due to the inter­est­ing light.

wpid1520-M9A0975_HDR.jpg

Then I cropped in once I got back home to elim­i­nate dis­tract­ing elements:

wpid1531-M9A0975_HDR.jpg

Now you can real­ly see what caught me atten­tion, the beau­ti­ful glow on this figure.

Then I noticed sim­i­lar light reflect­ing off the roof of anoth­er build­ing.   Repeat­ing pat­terns can make for nice images.

wpid1524-M9A0986.jpg

I played around with this image for quite a while to get it the way I want­ed.   I tried HDR and grad­u­at­ed fil­ters, but was­n’t sat­is­fied.  Then I turned to one of the many fil­ters in the Google/Nik Col­or Efex col­lec­tion.  They have a pre­set recipe of fil­ters called “Warm Sun­set”, and this was exact­ly what I was look­ing for.

wpid1518-M9A0986-Edit.jpg

There are so many fil­ters out there that it can be over­whelm­ing.  I’m still in the process of learn­ing which ones I like, but they can be very pow­er­ful tools when used properly.

Here’s an exam­ple of how I used fil­ters on an image I post­ed yesterday.

The orig­i­nal image looked like this:

wpid1526-M9A0623.jpg

There does­n’t seem to be any col­or in this image.  It almost looks black and white.  How­ev­er, If you turn up the sat­u­ra­tion you can bring out sub­tle col­ors that are hiding.

wpid1528-M9A0624.jpg

Isn’t that amaz­ing?  There’s some rich brown, green and pur­ple tones which weren’t ini­tial­ly vis­i­ble.  I liked the hint of pur­ple and want­ed to enhance it even fur­ther, so I put it through the Pur­ple Film recipe in Col­or Efex, which gave me the final result.   You can also see that I cropped the image slightly.

wpid1496-M9A0620_HDR-Edit.jpg

By crop­ping out part of the image I did­n’t want, I effec­tive­ly filled up the image with the parts that I did want.  It looks like I zoomed in on the gar­goyle, but that’s just an opti­cal illu­sion from cropping.

That’s it for today.  Hope­ful­ly I will make it to Mont­martre tomorrow.

 

 

Share this:

  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Face­book (Opens in new window) Face­book
  • More
  • Click to share on Pin­ter­est (Opens in new window) Pin­ter­est
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X

Like this:

Like Load­ing…
Posted in Uncategorized · Leave a Reply ·
← Older posts
Newer posts →

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

All content © 2025 by Aamir Zakaria Photography. Immense WordPress Theme by Graph Paper Press

×
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d