Today's picture was taken from my office at sunset. It was a foggy morning that day so I had taken my camera to work, because I would love to get a shot of skyscrapers sticking out of the fog. Well, the skies cleared just before I reached the office so I turned to taking pictures of the sunset instead.
I recently purchased a set of Graduated Neutral Density (GND) filters from Lee Filters, specifically designed for use with my Nikon 14-24mm f2.8 wideangle lens. I look forward to using these in landscape photography, but also want to test their limits in architectural photography. I used a 0.6 GND filter in this pic and I think it worked out well.
If you have questions or would like to hear more details about GND filters and how they work please feel free to drop me a comment.
Here's the photo:
Sebastian
I recently purchased a set of Graduated Neutral Density (GND) filters from Lee Filters, specifically designed for use with my Nikon 14-24mm f2.8 wideangle lens. I look forward to using these in landscape photography, but also want to test their limits in architectural photography. I used a 0.6 GND filter in this pic and I think it worked out well.
If you have questions or would like to hear more details about GND filters and how they work please feel free to drop me a comment.
Here's the photo:
14mm, f13, 8s, ISO 400, Lee 0.6 GND filter
I only now realise I was using ISO 400. Whooops.... should have been ISO 200, of course.
Post-processing included the following steps:
Lightroom
- Temperature: 4200K
- Tint: +7
- Exposure: 0.00
- Recovery: 0
- Fill Lights: 20
- Blacks: 7
- Brightness: +50
- Contrast: +25
- Clarity: +20
- Vibrance: +10
- Saturation: 0
- Export to Photoshop
- Apply Lens Correction Filter: Custom --> Vertical Perspective +2
- Apply Spot Healing Brush
- Apply Smart-Sharpen Filter: Amount 40%, Radius 1.3px
- Save as TIF
- Apply U-Points: Slightly increase the saturation of bronze glow on medium left tower and of green lights at the base of central tower
- Convert to sRGB with perception based rendering intent
- Save as JPG
- Insert watermark
- Save as JPG
Sebastian