Post-Processing Photos

fff|ggg|post_processing/stbasils2|Saint Basil’s|ggg|fff

One of the digital photography techniques I have been slow to adopt is post-processing. Put simply, post-processing is a set of techniques with which a photographer can manipulate photos after they come out of the camera. Dull photos become vibrant, dark photos become bright, blurry photos become sharp, crooked photos become straight. Rarely does a photo come out of a camera look like those amazing ones that you see in magazines or in the web’s best photo galleries.

I take so many photos that I don’t have the time or energy to go through post-processing with all of them. But I have recently been trying to learn some techniques to give photos a bit of extra “pop”. ***Mauricio|http://www.broadbandreports.com/profile/530139*** of the ***BBR|http://www.broadbandreports.com/*** digital imaging forum recently posted a ***tutorial|http://www.broadbandreports.com/speak/print/default;14125972*** on some techniques he used to get a really terrific looking photo. I’ve followed a few of his techniques and have put together a ***sample gallery|http://gallery.prwdot.org/post_processing*** showing photos before and after they have been post-processed. Most of the improvement comes from simply bumping up the saturation a bit, though I do also twiddle with color balance, curves, and sharpness. (Maybe I should bump up the saturation level on my camera? I know that I have a setting for that, and right now it’s set at “standard”…) Anyway, take a look at the ***samples|http://gallery.prwdot.org/post_processing*** and let me know what you think!

Also, this raises a question. What would you folks, the readers of our blog (and, hopefully, also the viewers of our ***gallery|http://gallery.prwdot.org/***), rather see when we upload photos: The full selection of photos with little or no post-processing? Or a smaller selection of ‘choice’ photos, with post-processing? In a way, I guess it comes down to quantity versus quality. Or perhaps both? Maybe I could revive the showcase gallery and take some of the best of the best, post-process them, and put them up for even more jaw-dropping effect?

3 thoughts on “Post-Processing Photos

  1. Angela

    I keep forgetting that I have to preview, -then- post! So here goes again.

    That’s a tough one. I prefer the authenticity of the “before” pictures, but on the other hand, some of those “after”s really POPPED. My vote goes for seeing all of the photos, even in their unaltered state… although I wouldn’t be opposed to seeing a few choices ones redone in the nouveau Technicolor.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *