arthurbikemad
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 473
- Edit My Images
- No
Hi, I had a quick mess around yesterday with some horse portraits, I have been asked as a friend could I do a couple of blacked out backgrounds of a horse? Thinking maybe I could just use my speed lights and some HSS I could grab a quick shot and Bobs Bob. Nope, first the nag was unsure of my shutter noise! Not so much the speed lights but even on quiet the nag seem to dislike it, me and said nag are friends but she defo was camera shy, so fired a quick Q to another forum member and she said to use a better location and utilise the ambient light. So managed to grab a couple of quick snaps and got some average images that I could stick trough post, I rushed through the edit and thought I had something that may have been an example, but no seems that my ageing Dell screens are deceiving me, i.e when viewed on another device you could see my rushed brush strokes etc. Perhaps the lesson is simple i.e don't rush or skimp on edit time? I thought brushing out highlights would be good enough rather than creating a selection/mask and composing a new image. So I guess my question is has anyone encounter a shock horror moment when they think an image looks great and then view/see it on another device. I know screen calibration maybe important but given that nearly all other devices are not calibrated where does that leave you?
Anyway here is my poor effort test image. Looks awful on my iPad but ok on my desktop, like I say my displays are old pro screens from Dell, they take a good half hour to come up to spec, perhaps time for some new displays and maybe screen cal.
Anyway here is my poor effort test image. Looks awful on my iPad but ok on my desktop, like I say my displays are old pro screens from Dell, they take a good half hour to come up to spec, perhaps time for some new displays and maybe screen cal.