I always see your videos in detail and I take notes of everything. I absolutely love them! They are quite entertaining whilst at the same time being very informative. I loved your results. I'm looking forward to the next video! Cheers Tom
Thanks Tom for another excellent video/tutorial. What would help when you share your images at the end of the video would if you included the camera settings that you used.
Great video & tips, especially the use of a CPL for combatting some of the haze that can be encountered during these long days. The coy looking cow with the sunset & dilapidated building was a great shot, lovely area too. To add: I bumped into a couple of your volunteer friends at my local nature reserve last month & they only had good things to say about you 👍 good man.
Thank you Tom for another top video with some excellent tips.I think it really does help to have 4 or 5 different steps to work through before taking that ultimate shot, be it sunset or rise, astro or even wildlife, it also slows you down which I think is important a lot of the time..I love the cow looking back and the sun framed by the building shots, like you say they work well...Also great little ending with the both of you on screen at same time, very clever that..
I agree with that. As a newbie to photography its great to find an entertaining channel that is informative. I dislike the American channels on UA-cam they just want to sell you something, and sit behind a desk in a studio.
Hi @@fredericapanon207 lifting the shadows basically means revealing details in darker areas of a photo that the camera’s sensor has captured but are not necessarily visible on the original RAW file. If you move the shadows slider to the right in post production software it reveals these details and makes areas of shadow appear lighter.
Love your presentation! Keep them coming.
I always see your videos in detail and I take notes of everything. I absolutely love them! They are quite entertaining whilst at the same time being very informative. I loved your results. I'm looking forward to the next video! Cheers Tom
I liked the cow looking back at you, and thus, the viewer of the picture.
I just found your channel and in the process of binge watching everything, thanks for the great tips 😊
Thanks Tom for another excellent video/tutorial. What would help when you share your images at the end of the video would if you included the camera settings that you used.
Great video as always!
I really enjoy your videos
Some great tips there Tom, thanks.
Great video & tips, especially the use of a CPL for combatting some of the haze that can be encountered during these long days.
The coy looking cow with the sunset & dilapidated building was a great shot, lovely area too.
To add: I bumped into a couple of your volunteer friends at my local nature reserve last month & they only had good things to say about you 👍 good man.
Thank you Tom for another top video with some excellent tips.I think it really does help to have 4 or 5 different steps to work through before taking that ultimate shot, be it sunset or rise, astro or even wildlife, it also slows you down which I think is important a lot of the time..I love the cow looking back and the sun framed by the building shots, like you say they work well...Also great little ending with the both of you on screen at same time, very clever that..
Good tips, as usual
Bro you're killing it, shocked you don't have 100k sub yet
I agree with that. As a newbie to photography its great to find an entertaining channel that is informative. I dislike the American channels on UA-cam they just want to sell you something, and sit behind a desk in a studio.
Enjoyed this Tom - not a fan of cows though 😊
Always look behind, there might be a bull sneaking up on you. 😂
What did you mean by "I lifted the shadows"?
Hi @@fredericapanon207 lifting the shadows basically means revealing details in darker areas of a photo that the camera’s sensor has captured but are not necessarily visible on the original RAW file. If you move the shadows slider to the right in post production software it reveals these details and makes areas of shadow appear lighter.
@@yorkshirephotowalks thank you!