by ChrisKotsiopoulos » Thu Dec 31, 2015 3:52 pm
Thank you all for your kind words!
gva wrote:I'd like to learn more about the technique that M. Kotsiopoulos used to stitch together the five photos. Both the pattern of clouds and the pattern of waves look natural and without noticeable boundaries; yet, the glare of the sun through the clouds and over the water, as well as the shadows of the hills, clearly indicate that different parts of the picture come from different photos. How was that accomplished? This is not only a beautiful picture, it's also a truly remarkable technical accomplishment!
Gva, the technique is simple. Five stacked photos with the Sun in different positions. The only side effect was that some close distant objects (grass, shoreline, hills) where dark and/or fussy. The solution was to selectively apply these elements from a sixth over-exposed shot taken at noon.
- Startrails.de for the stacking.
- Photoshop CS5 for the rest of the process (blending the sixth photo, brightness, contrast, color balance, sharpness).
Regards,
Chris.
Thank you all for your kind words!
:mrgreen:
[quote="gva"]I'd like to learn more about the technique that M. Kotsiopoulos used to stitch together the five photos. Both the pattern of clouds and the pattern of waves look natural and without noticeable boundaries; yet, the glare of the sun through the clouds and over the water, as well as the shadows of the hills, clearly indicate that different parts of the picture come from different photos. How was that accomplished? This is not only a beautiful picture, it's also a truly remarkable technical accomplishment![/quote]
Gva, the technique is simple. Five stacked photos with the Sun in different positions. The only side effect was that some close distant objects (grass, shoreline, hills) where dark and/or fussy. The solution was to selectively apply these elements from a sixth over-exposed shot taken at noon.
- Startrails.de for the stacking.
- Photoshop CS5 for the rest of the process (blending the sixth photo, brightness, contrast, color balance, sharpness).
Regards,
Chris.