Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2018/01/13

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Lovely portrait of a lovely lady.

Cheers,
Nathan

Nathan Wajsman
Alicante, Spain
http://www.frozenlight.eu <http://www.frozenlight.eu/>
http:// <http://www.greatpix.eu/>www.greatpix.eu
PICTURE OF THE WEEK: http://www.fotocycle.dk/paws <http://www.fotocycle.dk/paws>Blog: http://nathansmusings.wordpress.com/ <http://nathansmusings.wordpress.com/>
Cycling: http://www.crazyguyonabike.com/belgiangator <http://www.crazyguyonabike.com/belgiangator>
YNWA













> On 12 Jan 2018, at 01:13, Peter Klein <boulanger.croissant at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> <https://www.flickr.com/photos/24844563 at N04/38929746094/in/dateposted-public/>
> 
> The back story:  Tuesday night I got a phone call from a friend. Kina, her daughter, will play a cello solo with a local musical organization at the end of the month. They just told her that they need a picture of her for their online newsletter. Could I do it? When's it due?  Umm, tomorrow.
> 
> I arranged to come to the friend's house when Kina got home from school. I had about 90 minutes to do everything.  It was gray and rainy, so outside light wouldn't work.  I don't own any lights, but Kina's Dad had some. They turned out to be halogen.  Oh, well.  I found the most blank wall in the house, bounced the lights off the ceiling, set the camera's white balance with a sheet of white paper held in front of Kina's face.  I set the output files to full-size JPG plus RAW, and did the shoot.
> 
> Rapport was good. Things went well. I brought along my now-freeware image editor, Picture Window Pro on a flash drive, put it on the family computer, made a few adjustments to the best out-of-camera JPG.  They send it off to the musical organization. I rushed home, wolfed down dinner, went to my own orchestra rehearsal, got home, looked at the photo.  Their family computer was brighter than my calibrated monitor, so the photo is too dark.  I readjusted it, did a couple of little dodges and burns, and sent it off as a "correction if there's time."
> 
> Then I fooled with the RAW file to see if I could make it any better. The Olympus out-of-camera JPG is quite warm. Kina and her Mom liked it.  Capture One, using a photo of the white paper as the white-balance standard,  gave me a muted, almost pastel rendering of the RAW file.  The wall color is accurate, but Kina looks a bit paler than she actually is.
> 
> <http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/pklein/music/portraits/P1100521+2.jpg.html>
> 
> Often, I find that if I take the average of the too-warm initial white balance and a "correct" one derived from something white in the picture (or shot under the same conditions), that average is close to what I like. Not this time--whatever tweaks I tried made it worse.
> 
> The out-of-camera version is usable as-is. But I have a few other shots from the session that I'd like to work up.  Of course they could be converted to B&W.  But I'm wondering what I can do to make the white/color balance better.  And I'm wondering if I should invest in a couple of reasonably-priced lights or flashes (Is that an oxymoron?) if more people ask me to do this sort of thing. Re-arranging the living room lights works fine for B&W, but not always for color.
> 
> --Peter
> -- 
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> 



In reply to: Message from boulanger.croissant at gmail.com (Peter Klein) ([Leica] Portrait of Kina)