Pieces & Piecing It Together
It’s been over three months from my epic tour of Italy where I took over 2700 photos. That tour or at least the photographic part of it has been haunting me through that whole time frame. Despite my pre-trip preparations and setting up shooting strategies, I must say that they proved not to be that effective. Was it the strategy, my implementation of that strategy, or other forces that made the shooting aspect less than optimal in its results is hard to say.
I’ve gained some perspective over the three months of processing and thinking about the photos I had taken, and while initially I was quite despondent regarding my results, I have come to see that, in reality, I probably could not have done any better considering the circumstances of trying to shoot “professionally” in a less than optimal environment.
What I am trying to say is that I have had the task over the last few months of shifting through the hundreds of photos I’d taken, and evaluating them more microscopically, as it were. What I discovered is that many times my approach and composition of shots were great, but the ever constant out of focus or blur was present. I anticipated the possibility of these types of circumstances (where I might be rushed in places with new and different lighting situations) and try to compensate for this. My so-called anticipated solution to solve this potential problem was to shoot in manual mode, setting a high shutter speed with an aperture that I could quickly adjust for low light vs high light, and then simply put the ISO on automatic. For some reason(s) this often failed me. I probably would have more keepers if I had used the strategy of using Automatic Mode.
The above being said, I managed to have some success, but not with out working in post-processing to get it. Thus, the above title to this post, Pieces & Piecing It Together. The bright side to this current phase of less than optimal in-camera shots was that I was forced to beef up on my post processing skills. Personally, I much rather get it right in the camera, first.
The current photo to this post is that of wallpaper at the Villa Carlotta on Lake Como, Italy. The Villa was a most wonderful place with artisan craftsmanship throughout. The wallpaper had embroidery type details to cover the seams. There were several types of these embroideries in various room. For this photo I compiled three of them to maximize the effect they produced from viewing them in situ. The photos was taken with a Canon 5DS, EF24-105mm f/4L IS USM @ 65mm, f/5.6, 1/100″, -0.33 Exposure Compensation, ISO 6400, post processed with DxO PhotoLab, Adobe Camera Raw, Photoshop CC, and Color Efex Pro.
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