The Accident, As It Happened
Logs B&W
A Pile of Books
A Place for Contemplation
Contemplative Cat
Tree Cataloguing
Kitchen Cloths Drying
Another Pile of Different Books (100 ISO)
Our New Underwater World in a Wheelbarrow
Cooking with Carrots: Number 1 - High Speed Dicing
Don't Tell Tesco
Avoir Le Sourire
In the Oudolf Field
Why I Became a Photographer
Railway (New Edit)
The Figure in the Cloisters
Winter
Raindrops
Looking Out
X
Welcome
The Day of Ela
Good Christian Men, Rejoice
The Louvre
Compost Bin
Traffic
The Lacock Abbey Cat
Beyond Euclid ii
Free Entry
L.S. & E.G. 1945 Ashton Mill
Yellow Bleeding Heart
Depth of Field with a Chinon 55mm f/1.4
On a Passing Bus
Round Window
Deckchair
Runner in Sydney Gardens
f/2
Flying Buttress at Lacock Abbey
Sundial B&W at Lacock Abbey
Laura Place
Wanderers and Followers
Black is Back
Yello!
Leaf Disease
Lacock Abbey Behind the Trees (B&W)
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
28 visits
People In The Public Eye


Acutance is the edge contrast of an image, and is the only aspect of sharpness which is still under your control after the images have been made.
I like this photograph and I try to make it better from time to time. But it is like serving up the same dish only with a slightly different sauce. Silly, really.
I like this photograph and I try to make it better from time to time. But it is like serving up the same dish only with a slightly different sauce. Silly, really.
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Den gesamten Kontrast zu erhöhen, geht auf Kosten der Zeichnung in den Tiefen und Lichtern! Wie in dem Bild gut zu sehen ist.
Bei der Entwicklung von RAW-Aufnahmen reduziere ich immer etwas den Kontrast um dann zu schärfen oder mit dem Mitten-Kontrast zu spielen.
Fotografieren oder bearbeiten ist immer den besten Kompromiss zu finden, das perfekte Bild gibt es nicht.
Sign-in to write a comment.