Hi.
What tricks/techniques are good to know when it comes to aviation photography? What could improve the final product, give it more punch? What should/could be included in workflow for a bit more "arty" pictures?
Till now my approach was rather simple - basic post processing all the way, like adding salt to the food. Sometimes however I feel that my photos could look much better if I knew what to do with them, how to enhance them. I have few thousands of RAWs from RIAT and all the time in the world, so even if someone could suggest good book about advanced use of Camera Raw/Photoshop or just give me name of techniques/tools I should learn about, I'll be grateful

.
Cheers
Tom
Hi Tom,
Great that you are asking. I'm going to answer honestly here, and you or others may wish to disagree or ignore my advice. Sometimes you need to go on a journey to experience the learning curve...
I think hesja takes some awesome photos, but personally I am not a fan of the processing. Unfortunately things like tone mapping give that instant gratification and 'wow' factor that in this age of swiping though photo feeds at high speed jump out. The reality is though a very garish digitised look, with halos and colour shifts all over the place. The best photos of any genre, whilst having a signature look, are processed in a more timeless manor for me. Accurate colour and lighting (to how the eye may have seen it) but with the processing being used similarly to how you describe, to enhance the photo. As the photo is a message from the photographer to the viewer I always think the processing should amplify how the image makes the photographer feel.
Which gets me onto my important point that with aviation photography, like any genre, the work that turns a snapshot into a photograph begins in camera. The creative use of aperture and shutter speed, light and composition are all part of making an image of something you love into a photo that will stand out because it means something. You can then enhance this shot with the processing.
I will quickly say looking at your flickr that the stand out brilliant shot on there is a picture of (I'm guessing yours!) missus. It is in the vertical and just brilliant, the colour of the lipstick and hair, depth of field use, soft processing and sharpness of the eye are important but the connection between the photographer (and then the viewer) and your subject is clear to see. Apply that sort of thinking and feeling to your aviation pictures, rather than just snapping them and wanting to tone map them and you will get some stuff you can be proud of...
As brief point though, a lot of your stuff on flickr appears slightly underexposed. They may not be, and it may be a processing decision from working on a too bright a screen of course, but they lack a little pop that additional exposure would give. Not too much of course because you don't want to wash the images out or lose the highlights.
I think if you really want to photograph aircraft well and artistically you need to shoot them in better light. Unfortunately airshows are in the summer, so you get a lot of heat haze (causing softness) and the sun is high in the sky with the subject usually a long way off. There are airshows in better conditions, the shuttle worth collection do evening shows and I think MAKS in Russia is early evening too. Or of course, whilst not strictly an airshow there is Axalp every other year and you see some awesome stuff from there.Failing that RIAT in July on the Friday night some validation displays run on into the early evening and a Spitfire normally goes up in gorgeous light about 8pm too...
I include below some examples of aviation images that are taken in better light, which will either require you to get to an airbase when they are night flying, or during winter;
GR4SunsetTouchdown by
Craig Hollis, on Flickr
F15E by
Craig Hollis, on Flickr
Lakenheath Sunset by
Craig Hollis, on Flickr
F-22A Raptor by
Craig Hollis, on Flickr
As you can see, it gives you the option of either shooting directly into a colourful sky silhouetting the airframes, or shooting across the light to accentuate the shape of them.
Another option is to get yourself into a unique position, like the Mach Loop to show the aircraft within a landscape low level;
Panavia Tornado GR4 ZD720 086 by
Craig Hollis, on Flickr
Eurofighter Typhoon T3 ZJ812 BK by
Craig Hollis, on Flickr
Moving onto airshows, my advice is to track the subject at nearly all times because moments of magic can happen and you need to be blasting frames off when they do;
650C3691 by
Craig Hollis, on Flickr
C27J by
Craig Hollis, on Flickr