Antonov An-12 turkish Cargo - Roden 1:72
Kommentit
5 18 February 2020, 08:24
Treehugger
Looks very nice, but I wonder if maybe the anti glare black area should be more matte though if I can be a little picky here.
I also think that maybe the photos could use a tweak. Presumably the ground under the model isn't supposed to be grey but more white, and presumably the model would look more white after an adjustment.
Looks very nice, but I wonder if maybe the anti glare black area should be more matte though if I can be a little picky here.
I also think that maybe the photos could use a tweak. Presumably the ground under the model isn't supposed to be grey but more white, and presumably the model would look more white after an adjustment.
18 February 2020, 09:02
Selman Yarar
You're right but i'm not even an amateur at taking photos. I don't have the patience for it😉
You're right but i'm not even an amateur at taking photos. I don't have the patience for it😉
18 February 2020, 14:07
Selman Yarar
In fact the backround is a white store, the lights are bluish white and i have a Canon digital SLR camera that i'm not able to use, so i took these ones with my Samsung mobile...
In fact the backround is a white store, the lights are bluish white and i have a Canon digital SLR camera that i'm not able to use, so i took these ones with my Samsung mobile...
18 February 2020, 14:08
Selman Yarar
Maybe i should attend some kind of course for this lack of knowledge.
Maybe i should attend some kind of course for this lack of knowledge.
18 February 2020, 14:09
Treehugger
Two things comes to mind:
1) What is white in a photo (if anything), and does it look "white"? This indicates something about the brightness level.
2) If the brightness is ok, is there a desirable, or undesirable light color to any colored surface?
What happens in real life, sunlight reflected onto white paper would end up looking more yellow'ish, while an overcast sky, with mainly blue'ish light, will tend to reflect onto white paper with a blue'ish tint. Certain types of artificial lighting may cast some other hue onto whatever is lit, or reflected by that light.
A problematic situation, would be, if you have a model lit by strong light, or basically, light that itself has been colorized by say being reflected off a red colored table surface.
Photos can easily be tweaked to remove undesirable colors in an image editor.
Something I've learned from my pocket camera, is to avoid zooming in on a model to fill the screen, because, somehow, the camera seem to get more blurry towards the edges, so instead I can just keep the model around the center in the camera, and then save a large resolution file, and crop away the surrounding area in the photo.
Two things comes to mind:
1) What is white in a photo (if anything), and does it look "white"? This indicates something about the brightness level.
2) If the brightness is ok, is there a desirable, or undesirable light color to any colored surface?
What happens in real life, sunlight reflected onto white paper would end up looking more yellow'ish, while an overcast sky, with mainly blue'ish light, will tend to reflect onto white paper with a blue'ish tint. Certain types of artificial lighting may cast some other hue onto whatever is lit, or reflected by that light.
A problematic situation, would be, if you have a model lit by strong light, or basically, light that itself has been colorized by say being reflected off a red colored table surface.
Photos can easily be tweaked to remove undesirable colors in an image editor.
Something I've learned from my pocket camera, is to avoid zooming in on a model to fill the screen, because, somehow, the camera seem to get more blurry towards the edges, so instead I can just keep the model around the center in the camera, and then save a large resolution file, and crop away the surrounding area in the photo.
18 February 2020, 15:35
Treehugger
I made some changes to your photo. What I did was to tweak the max bright "levels" by clipping at the optimal level, and then I moved the center gamma slider to make things a little brighter still. No changes to any of the colors per se: ibb.co/HV9gvx4
Ideally you will want to work with floating point images in an image editor, to avoid banding effect to occur in the photo when tweaking things, a banding effect which will likely happen with tweaking 8bit rgb photos that has fine gradient areas.
I made some changes to your photo. What I did was to tweak the max bright "levels" by clipping at the optimal level, and then I moved the center gamma slider to make things a little brighter still. No changes to any of the colors per se: ibb.co/HV9gvx4
Ideally you will want to work with floating point images in an image editor, to avoid banding effect to occur in the photo when tweaking things, a banding effect which will likely happen with tweaking 8bit rgb photos that has fine gradient areas.
18 February 2020, 17:37