{ Posts for February, 2009 }


Valentine’s Day at 1050 Feet.

Post by fotolistic on February 17th, 2009   In Category : Photography   

Top of the World

Feb 14th, 2009
Photographed by: H.Yiu
©2009 yello77.com
15 Photos in Gallery.

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For Valentine’s Day this year, Annie and I cooked a nice, romantic meal in the comfort of our own home, without having to deal with reservations, bad service and swooning lovebirds in crowded restaurants. Our homemade dinner was coffee-rubbed ribeye steak, with mashed potatoes ‘n’ gravy, broccoli rabe and some organic sparkling pear juice (because Annie is a lightweight). The highlight of the night was doing the dishes together (although Annie insisted that she did most of them) and…we spent the rest of the evening atop the Empire State Building (on the 86th floor), and joined all the lovebirds we avoided at dinner. It was really, really cold so we periodically ducked back into the enclosed indoor observatory area. I took some decent shots when the wind slowed down. Looking at the glowing city below from this altitude gives you the illusion that you are flying thought the sky.

All photographs were shot in Raw Format with a Canon 50D.
I used the 16mm – 35mm f/2.8 Lens at ISO 400.
Photos of the city were shot using Shutter Speed Priority (TV or S) at 30 seconds.
The portraits were shot using the pop-up flash, set to Shutter Speed Priority (TV or S) at 1/5 of a second.
Flash was set to "2nd Curtain Sync".
I used my DIY pop-up flash diffuser to help control the flash output.
Post processed with Aperture and Photoshop CS4.

 

This is the view of the Empire State Building from my office window. I thought it was already quite spectacular, until…

…I saw this view of the city from the Empire State Building. Talk about breathtaking.
This is the uptown view from the observatory deck on the 86th floor.
You are looking at some of the city’s taller buildings from NYC’s tallest edifice.

Southside: can you see the Brooklyn, Manhattan, and the Verrazano bridges?

Here’s another view of the downtown side (south). Don’t they look like little Lego buildings?
On the far left, the brightest street is 5th Avenue, at the junction where it intersects Broadway is
the Flatiron Building.

No visit to any great landmark will be complete without some kind of documented proof of our presence. Here’s Annie’s.

The temperature was in the high 30’s at ground level. Up here, low 20’s with the infamous NYC wind chill factor. It was REALLY cold.

From inside the observatory– where it was very warm.

Here’s my best side.

Playing around with some vintage coloring.

I’m not angry. Just cold.

This picture is the result of someone taking our picture but didn’t know how to use my camera. Sigh…

Read 3 Comments for this post or Add a Comment
  1. Wilfa says:

    Your work is amazing!! I can feel the emotions and life within your photos. How long have you been doing this? incrediable work!!!

  2. fotolistic says:

    I forgot to indicate, the three photo of the city scape on top are HDR (High Dynamic Range) image processed from just a single Raw file for each image.

  3. Gary Esposito says:

    Incredible! If i had some extra $, I’d buy those spectacular views of Manhattan from you.
    Those are your best ones yet!

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A Photograph’s Life — Before and After Photoshop

Post by fotolistic on February 13th, 2009   In Category : DSLR Photography 101, Photography, Technical   

You know the old saying "a magician never reveals his secret". Well, thank goodness I’m not a magician. I’m simply a plastic surgeon for photographs.

I’ve always being ask about the "how did you get such effect?" by visitors to yello77.com. I’m always so eager to share, but too lazy to write about it. Finally, I’ve got some time to put something together. I’ve selected a handful of photographs from a variety of albums from my own collection that best illustrate how Photoshop processing can greatly enhance a mediocre photo into something that is picture-frame worthy. Here’s some of the before and after photos along with some simple explanation about the procedure that have been perform to it.

21mm f-2.8 1/400 ISO 200
– Slightly tighter cropping
– White Balance for Tungsten
– Color Balance for a greenish bluish tint
– Clone in background on the lower left side
– Increase exposure by 25% to make it brighter
– Lowering the contrast by 15% to lighten and even out detail
– Recovering shadowed detail around the face and eyes area with the Highlight/Shadow Recovery tool
– Skin retouching around the face and under the eyes with Blurring filter, High Pass filter, Noise filter and Mask
– Lightening of the eyes with Level Adjustment Layer so it sparkle a bit
– Lightening legs for a glowing look with Level Adjustment Layer
– Sharpening ONLY around the face area with the High Pass filter and Layer Mask
– Apply a streaky texture layer set to Overlay for more of an artist effect
– Added snow flakes to filled in negative space
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

35mm f-2.8 1/250 ISO 200
– Really tighter cropping
– White Balance for Tungsten
– Color Balance for a greenish bluish tint
– Increase exposure by 5% to make it brighter
– Smoothening the skin around the face so it looks more even
– Lightening of the eyes with Level Adjustment Layer so it sparkle a bit
– Sharpening ONLY around the face area with the High Pass filter and Layer Mask
– Apply a dirty texture layer set to Overlay for more of an artist effect

 

35mm f-2.8 1/500 ISO 200
– Slightly tighter cropping
– White Balance for Tungsten
– Color Balance for a greenish bluish tint for the highlight area
– Color Balance for a dark reddish tint for the darker tones
– Increase exposure by 25% to make it brighter
– Recovering shadowed detail around the face and eyes area with Level Adjustment Layer and Mask
– Skin retouching for a smoother look
– Lightening legs for a glowing look with Level Adjustment Layer
– Sharpening ONLY around the face area with the High Pass filter and Layer Mask
– Added snow flakes for a more snowy effect
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

50mm f-1.4 1/1000 ISO 400
– White Balance for Overcast
– Color Balance for a Yellowish tint
– Slight facial retouching for the blemish
– Increase exposure 10% to make it brighter
– Increase saturation by 15%
– Recovering shadowed detail around the eyes
– Skin retouching for bags under the eyes

 

50mm f-1.4 1/100 ISO 200
– White Balance for Daylight
– Increase exposure by 25% to make it brighter
– Increasing the overall contrast by 20% with Level Adjustment Layer and Mask
– Increase saturation

 

35mm f-2.8 1/500 ISO 200
– White Balance for Daylight
– Increase exposure by 25% to make it brighter
– Increasing the overall contrast with the Curve Adjustment layer 15%
– Increase saturation by 15%
– Bringing out additional detail in the eyes by the curve tool 10%
– Sharpening of the eyes, eyelash and lips with the High Pass filter and Layer Mask
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

50mm f-1.4 1/50 ISO 400
– White Balance for tungsten
– Color Balance for a slight yellowish tint
– Extensive facial retouching with Blurring filter, High Pass filter and Noise filter and Mask
– Sharpening of the eyes, eyelash and lips with the High Pass filter and Layer Mask

 

35mm f-7.1 1/80 ISO 200
– Slightly tighter cropping
– White Balance for Daylight
– Color Balance for a yellowish tint
– Color Balance for a dark reddish tint for the darker tones
– Skin retouching around the face and under the eyes with Blurring filter, High Pass filter, Noise filter and Mask
– Slightly blurring the entire image for the slight out of focus look.
– Apply a worn out texture over the image to give it a more vintage polaroid effect

 

31mm f-6.3 1/160 ISO 200
– Tighter cropping
– White Balance for Daylight
– Color Balance for a warm and yellowish tint
– Increase exposure by 20% to make it brighter
– Lowering the contrast by 10% to lighten and even out detail
– Increase saturation overall by 15%
– Recovering shadowed detail around the entire body (face, arms, blouse, jeans) with the Highlight/Shadow Recovery tool plus Layer Mask
– Blurring around the body to create that soft glowing effect with Blur Filter and Mask
– Applying blur on the background to enhance that out of focus effect with Blur Filter and Mask
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

35mm f-3.5 1/1000 ISO 200
– Skin retouching around the face and under the eyes with Blurring filter, High Pass filter, Noise filter and Mask
– Sharpening of the eyes, eyelash and lips with the High Pass filter and Layer Mask

 

21mm f-2.8 1/800 ISO 400
– White Balance for Overcast
– Color Balance for a slight greenish yellowish tint
– Color Balance for a slight dark reddish tint for the darker tones
– Desaturation 10%
– Skin retouching around the face area with the Blurring filter, High Pass filter, Noise filter and Mask
– Sharpening of the eyes, eyelash and lips with the High Pass filter and Layer Mask
– Recovering some highlight detail on the sky and tree area with the Highlight/Shadow Recovery tool plus Layer Mask
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

55mm f-20 1/100 ISO 400
– Increase exposure to make the photo slightly more exposed
– Increasing the overall contrast with Level Adjustment Layer and Mask
– Saturation just a bit
– Apply lens flare effect with the Lens Flare Filter
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

35mm f-2.8 1/800 ISO 200
– Increase exposure by 10% to make the photo more exposed
– Increasing the overall contrast by 10% with Level Adjustment Layer and Mask
– Saturation by 20%
– Recovering highlight details in the background with the Highlight/Shadow Recovery tool plus Layer Mask
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

16mm f-2.8 1/50 ISO 200
– Lower exposure by 10% to make a little bit darker
– Color Balance for a slight greenish yellowish tint
– Increasing the overall contrast by 10% with Level Adjustment Layer and Mask
– Saturation by 20%
– Recovering highlight details in the bottles with the Highlight/Shadow Recovery tool plus Layer Mask
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

50mm f-1.4 1/1600 ISO 200
– White Balance for Overcast
– Color Balance overall for a yellowish tint
– Color Balance for a darker yellowish tint on the background
– Increase exposure by 10% to make it brighter
– Increase the overall contrast by 10%
– Darkening the background by 20% with with Level Adjustment Layer and Mask
– Desaturation by 10%
– Recovering highlight detail on the dress with the Highlight/Shadow Recovery tool
– Sharpening ONLY around the dress High Pass filter and Layer Mask
– Apply a crackle texture layer set to Overlay for the rustic effect
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

26mm f-3.2 1/1000 ISO 200
– White Balance for Overcast
– Color Balance overall for a muddy yellowish tint
– Color Balance for a dark reddish tint for the darker tones
– Decrease exposure by 15% to make it darker
– Increase the overall contrast by 20%
– Desaturation by 20%
– Recovering highlight detail on the sky with the Highlight/Shadow Recovery tool
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

 

50mm f-1.8 1/250 ISO 200
– Tighter cropping
– White Balance for Overcast
– Color Balance overall for a light yellowish tint
– Color Balance for a dark greenish tint for the darker tones
– Increase exposure by 10% to make it darker
– Increase the overall contrast by 20%
– Saturation by 10%
– Recovering highlight detail on the sky with the Highlight/Shadow Recovery tool
– Apply an old and dirty photo frame layer set to Overlay for a more vintage effect

 

50mm f-8 1/320 ISO 200
– White Balance for Overcast
– Color Balance overall for a muddy greenish tint
– Color Balance for a dark purple tint for the darker tones
– Increase exposure by 10% to make it darker
– Increase the overall contrast by 20%
– Saturation by 20%
– Recovering highlight detail on the sky with the Highlight/Shadow Recovery tool
– Vignettes around the edge and corner

Read 4 Comments for this post or Add a Comment
  1. fotolistic says:

    Kool. Glad you find it helpful.

  2. Shooi says:

    WOW! THis is very very good. I have been looking for photoshop tips for DSLR. Thanks for sharing!

  3. psychopooch says:

    i love what you did with the photo of amanda. she looks dreamy ;)

  4. Lois says:

    Nice work. you really made some not-so-interesting photos really interesting and beautiful. I guess you are in a way like a plastic surgeon for photographs.

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Lunar New Year Parade in Chinatown

Post by fotolistic on February 1st, 2009   In Category : Meetup, Photography   

Year of the Moo

Feb 1st 2009
Photographed by: H.Yiu
©2009 yello77.com
55 Photos in Gallery.

none

The first photography outing for my Digital Photography Workshop meetup group.

While most people were at home watching the SuperBowl, I decided to organize a photo meetup to document the parade in Chinatown celebrating the Lunar New Year. It was a mad house, was one of the most difficult events I’ve covered in a long time. Given the fact that I’m much shorter than most of the people in the crowd didn’t help either. All in all, I got some 50+ presentable photographs from more than 150 original photos.

Along the way, I ran into some old friends with their families. So some of the photos are of them.

All photographs were shot in Raw format with a Canon 50D.
I used a 16mm – 35mm f/2.8 Lens @ 200 ISO.
Post-processed with Aperture and Photoshop CS4.

Read 1 Comment for this post or Add a Comment

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