the message board for Dubai English speaking community
Photoshop is a necessary skill if you want to be a pro, and not everyone is good at it. It is well demanded, but if it is mediocre photoshop editing then it is not a pro level job.Mario45 wrote:Anyone can make a mediocre photo look special with the aid of photoshop etc.
(1) I like to be a pro.Mario45 wrote:but you are not a pro, so why take the fun out of a hobby by trying to make it look like a proffessional job?
Point was if it has mishaps then it is not a professional grade editing. You don't need to look at what it looked like before.Mario45 wrote:I don't know if it looks photoshopped as I don't know what it looked like before.
Without computers, photos weren't that good. Computers made them better hence digital photography became popular. Highest paid professional photographers also digitally alter their photos. And if computers were available the past, previous pro photographers would have also used computers.Mario45 wrote:Photographers years ago, must have been very good if they did not have computers to help them.
Did I say I was a pro? But a photo was posted from a pro, not sure which one but my guess is it was the photo of Burj Al Arab with pink tint.Mario45 wrote:How can you like to be a pro? Being a pro means you earn your living from it, I think, may be you do earn your living from it, but I do not think so if you put your work here for free.
Having nice computer doesn't mean skills. Lot of people have nice computers these days.Mario45 wrote:which shows you have a nice computer.
Nice collection there. I like the color and detail changes between before and after photos.Chocoholic wrote:Here's a great example, a friend of mine - professional photographer has this blog: http://www.clearandtransparent.com/blog/
If you like that kind of photos then you can be the non-digitial photographer. I suppose there is a small community for that.Mario45 wrote:It removes any feeling from the photographs and just leaves a manufactured image. There is no life. No feeling.
That sounds easy but it is not that easy. It takes good eye, practice, and experience to fine tune it in the right balance.Chocoholic wrote: it's not huge changes, just slight colour, contrast, shadow and the odd focus alteration. Really good examples of how subtle techniques can enhance the images.
We are on totally different pages. You are talking about composition. As for getting back on the topic, editing happened 50 years ago too, but it was paints, brushes, and pencils.Mario45 wrote:There is personality in that photograph and it is iconic. How many of the digital images created in your way will be around in 50 or so years? none I think unless you are special.
I said so before, you take a plain woman and make her beautiful with the art of make up but when you remove the paint, all you are left with is one plain and bland woman. Who may be beautiful to some, I will add.