Capture: Two Tone
424 Responses
First ←Older Page 1 … 6 7 8 9 10 … 17 Newer→ Last
-
Chris Waugh, in reply to
Thanks, David, I'll have a look into lightzone.
The trouble I'm having with GIMP is that I have to convert .NEF to .jpg before I import to GIMP. That UFRaw thing is doing weird stuff to my photos, like making them much darker and curving the edges and giving me file sizes anywhere from a few hundred KB to twice the size of the original, and that Nikon thingy I downloaded and installed and now it's MIA.
-
Chris Waugh, in reply to
From the gardens
Love that second one - the gardens as portal to an alien world.
-
Still waiting lightzone approval, but in the meantime that NEF to JPG programme I'm pretty sure I linked to above seems to be doing the trick. Unlike Picasa and UFRaw, the change in file size after conversion to jpg is not in any way dramatic, for one thing.
This is proving to be quite an educational thread. Thanks for all the tips, everyone.
-
Islander, in reply to
Awww! Your lovely wee girl!
Whumph!
Stern great-aunt ressurrects, harrumph!(in tiny wee letters, what a lovely wee girl - she enhances all the photos she is in-)
-
Hebe, in reply to
Your problems explain a lot of the problem I have. I've given up on raw and black and white this year because I can't get Irfanview or Windows Photo or Gimp (when I had it but didn't like the way it worked so deleted) to open the Nikon raw/nef files. I'm mostly going with open-source software on the laptop (which is much gruntier than the old PC so have been planning to use it for photos). So lightzone is my next move! If that doesn't work I'll have to save up for Lightroom or Photoshop.
Have you tried the Nikon Capture software? I don't want to invest all the time it takes me to learn new software if it only works on Nikon not other cameras.
And film: I've been looking at the old film cameras remembering that darkroom magic.
-
Chris Waugh, in reply to
Have you tried the Nikon Capture software?
No, I haven't, but if, as you say, it only works for Nikon cameras, it really doesn't seem worth it. I assume at some stage I'll need a new camera and although I'm happy with Nikon, I can't guarantee that the next camera will be a Nikon (brand loyalty has its value, but not when taken to an extreme), and in the here and now have photos from HTC and Samsung phones to deal with.
Irfan View I'm still unsure about, but I seem to be having a certain measure of success with GIMP for the time being. I'm curious to see what happens when (if?) my lightzone approval comes through.
-
Chris Waugh, in reply to
she enhances all the photos she is in
Of course! (yeah, I'm biased...) though in this one she was trying on her new kindy uniform/tracksuit (no, she doesn't have to wear it, but all the kids get one so they can wear it if they want) and she was quite happy posing in front of the mirror but wasn't really in a modelling mood. I prefer this in black and white, though, because the kindy unfortunately chose green and gold for its colours.
-
David Hood, in reply to
when (if?) my lightzone approval
I seem to recall mine taking a couple of days.
-
-
-
Jonathan Ganley, in reply to
waited with my camera pre-focused and click.
Well worth the wait! The kids watching is a nice detail.
-
-
-
-
Ian Dalziel, in reply to
spied-her-web captures...
...and click
double click,
eternity passingThe kids watching is a nice detail.
the lost boys ...
- kids-snapped
in plain sight
frozen in lost light
Immortality,
& eternal youth,
are theirs - but
they know that
already...Welcome aboard the light train...
Nice detail on the mortar work, too,
though I'm worried about that cracked
brick window lintel on the far right...
Chchch eyes... -
Hebe, in reply to
I’ll make another plug for Lightzone
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I downloaded Lightzone last night and first thing this morning was straight into playing. Like you say, the nearest thing to darkroom magic in digital. I'm a convert. I work by look rather than tech specs, so it will take a while to understand. And to find the crop mechanism.
-
Glad to here you find it useful. The crop is a button at the top of the window- and a separate button for rotating the crop area. Changing the resolution is done when you use the export command.
You are basically stacking layers on top of the original image cumulatively changing the picture (and these layers can be semi-seethrough to lessen their effect). You can either add you layers from scratch with the buttons on top the current layers area on the right right, or use the presets from the left hand side. -
OK, given it's a holiday morning and I should be doing something else, here are some (relatively) recent pix given the B&W treatment. Most are from my trusty 5D (RAW originals), processed in Lightroom 4 using some of the standard B&W "looks" provided - with a bit of tweaking.
This one's the whaling station in Pelorus Sound.
-
-
-
-
Hebe, in reply to
Chchch eyes…
And me.
-
-
-
JacksonP, in reply to
Hi Wendy (or Mart) that's a damn fine shot to be joining in with.
And loving all the other stuff. Glad we distracted you Gareth. ;-)
Post your response…
This topic is closed.