Spray-n-Pray is the story of my photographic journey. I often take more than one photo at a time. I'll document multi-exposure techniques that I use and show some of the results. If you wander into this site, it's likely that we have a common interest. Feel free to look around and learn to avoid my mistakes and/or to be inspired to do better.
Showing posts with label Baltimore Oriole. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baltimore Oriole. Show all posts
Saturday, May 4, 2013
Orioles and Oranges
Winter doesn't want to quit this year. An overnight storm left 3 1/2 inches of snow on May 2. I was surprised to see a Baltimore Oriole on my deck by the feeders. I took out an orange and he immediately returned to eat.
I put my camera on the kitchen table and took photos through the window several times during the day. When I downloaded the shots, I had over 100 images of Orioles and oranges. Most of them looked fine individually, but they were more than a bit redundant in a group. I needed to select the best without wasting a lot of time.
I put BreezeBrowser Pro in slide show mode. I ranked the entire group with a number 1 to toss and a number 4 to keep. Birds that weren't sharp or had their butt facing the camera received ones. I sorted by ranking and put all the number ones in the cull group. About 1/2 of the original group remained - about 50.
I utilized the compare feature in Breezebrowser Pro next. I selected images 4 at t time. I picked the strongest image in each group and tagged it. I paid particular emphasis on the sharpness of the oriole's eye. I moved all the untagged images into a separate directory. About 12 tagged images remained.
I used Breezebrowser to look at the entire group of remaining shots as thumbnails. When viewed this small several shots looked like exact duplicates of each other. I selected the duplicates and used slideshow mode to view them in full screen size. None of the images was an exact duplicate when viewed full size. I let the slide show loop until I determined the best image off the group. I kept the best image and removed the rest. About 6 images remained.
Lightroom could be used for these steps instead of Breezebrowser if you have plenty of patience. I don't. I loaded the remaining 6 images into Lightroom to adjust cropping, exposure and color. I deleted any image was not satisfactory in Lightroom, The shot above was one of the 6 images.
Some would call this process "Spray and Pray". I disagree. Every shot that I took was the best pose and sharpness that I could manage at the time. When is all said on done, it doesn't matter how many shots I took or how much trouble I had getting the shot. The final image is all that matters. You either like it or you don't.
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