My canon 600d always satisfy me :)

JeremyHank

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I have just bought a Canon 600d, so I decided to try it in my trip with my buddy. The weather was nice and the landscape is beautiful. I was shooting through Canon 600d with lens kit 18-55. I retouch my pictures by lightroom 5. I'd greatly appreciate critiques and comments.

Thank for considering :)

d070a12b02e64562a3c45657de48d36f.jpg


47a8c0f12be54755817dedf6c4f40c87.jpg


b2bf990bd2f4441e8e3af6880bec0ffb.jpg
 
I have just bought a Canon 600d, so I decided to try it in my trip with my buddy. The weather was nice and the landscape is beautiful. I was shooting through Canon 600d with lens kit 18-55. I retouch my pictures by lightroom 5. I'd greatly appreciate critiques and comments.

Thank for considering :)

d070a12b02e64562a3c45657de48d36f.jpg


47a8c0f12be54755817dedf6c4f40c87.jpg


b2bf990bd2f4441e8e3af6880bec0ffb.jpg
White balance is way off.



Way off.



tedolph
 
1. Good photo. I love the color and the lay out.

2. Have you used any preset. It looks similar to me, is it "1969" preset :)

3. You should decrease your AV as lower then 0. The sunlight was strong so the percentage of burned photos would increase .

Vicky,

 
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Jeremy might be intentionally have done Split toning or have applied some kind of filter to the images.
But I doubt he did it via WB settings.

However this kind of Post Processing is not for everybody.
For me, I kinda like it depending on the subject.

In this case I like it on the Bridge with a guy shot (3rd shot)
But not so much on the Mountain and sky shots (1st 2 images)
However IQ wise and compostion, I like both
 
Lovely pictures.I like your personalized post processing.And last image is really amazing.
 
All of these shots are at f/4.5.

Two comments:
  1. The aperture controls the depth of field and in these kind of shots in bright light it is probably the most important thing to control. f/4.5 might give a suitable depth of field for the second and third shots if you wanted the backgrounds to be out of focus, but the first shot would be better with the greater depth of field that you get at smaller apertures (larger f/ numbers).
  2. Your lens will be sharpest at f/8 or f/11 than at f/4.5. If you don't need a small depth of field, shoot at smaller apertures to get sharper images.
I personally don't like the WB/colour treatment.

Try playing with the contrast settings on this kind of shot or with "Clarity" if you are using Lightroom or ACR. Both will reduce the haze if that is what you want to do.
 
Over exposed. The processing makes them look like you shot all the photos through a very strong yellow filter (not attractive).

It is close to impossible to re-process a processed photo. But here is a more natural processed one one so you can compare side by side





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--
See my plan (in my profile) for what I shoot with. See my gallery for images I find amusing.
 
I have just bought a Canon 600d, so I decided to try it in my trip with my buddy. The weather was nice and the landscape is beautiful. I was shooting through Canon 600d with lens kit 18-55. I retouch my pictures by lightroom 5. I'd greatly appreciate critiques and comments.

Thank for considering :)
sorry, not a fan of the overexposed "cyan" processing
 

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