Had to say thanks for this one after putting it into practice. Always known the colour balance icon was there but had no idea what a magnificent final touch it was. Really like the results, even with really subtle adjustments. Thanks for turning me onto this.
Excellent photography with those soft tones, a very good developing technique to put it into practice, fabulous work. I wanted to ask if you used a 10-stop density filter to be able to take that 247-second shot and avoid getting overexposed. Regards @ThePhlogPhotography good job.
Beautiful concise tutorial. Thank you. When you were doing the final hue adjustments I was cringing that you were ruining the terrific weathered gray of the dock - until you masked it out! Again, thanks, I’m giving it a whirl on a couple of my sunrise/sunset shots.
Thank you so much! Those things are easy to overlook once you work on an image long enough :-) After taking a break and looking back o nthe photo, I realised I need to mask that part out
@@ThePhlogPhotography you’re so right. I find processing landscapes very difficult because there are so many “moving parts” even though everything is sitting still. Changing one element often dominoes to others. Mostly, I shoot birds and wildlife; they’re so much easier to process - subject ….. background …. subject …… background …… take out distracting branches, sticks and stones ….. done.
white balance manages blue to yellow. tint manages green to magenta. I want lightroom or camera raw for that matter to include a red to cyan slider just below them!
Had to say thanks for this one after putting it into practice. Always known the colour balance icon was there but had no idea what a magnificent final touch it was. Really like the results, even with really subtle adjustments. Thanks for turning me onto this.
As always - short and clear explanation. Thank you 👌
After following the previous tutorials my Pictures already looked Awesome but now they look even better!
Excellent photography with those soft tones, a very good developing technique to put it into practice, fabulous work. I wanted to ask if you used a 10-stop density filter to be able to take that 247-second shot and avoid getting overexposed. Regards @ThePhlogPhotography good job.
Thank you very much! I did indeed use a 10 stop ND Filter, otherwise it would have not been possible to capture the image without overexposure
Thank you, nice lesson!!!
Beautiful concise tutorial. Thank you. When you were doing the final hue adjustments I was cringing that you were ruining the terrific weathered gray of the dock - until you masked it out! Again, thanks, I’m giving it a whirl on a couple of my sunrise/sunset shots.
Thank you so much! Those things are easy to overlook once you work on an image long enough :-) After taking a break and looking back o nthe photo, I realised I need to mask that part out
@@ThePhlogPhotography you’re so right. I find processing landscapes very difficult because there are so many “moving parts” even though everything is sitting still. Changing one element often dominoes to others. Mostly, I shoot birds and wildlife; they’re so much easier to process - subject ….. background …. subject …… background …… take out distracting branches, sticks and stones ….. done.
Great stuff Christian, very useful. Great to see your channel picking up subscribers too
Thank you so much Michael!
Klasse Tutorial, wieder etwas hinzugelernt👍
Vielen lieben Dank!
Thanks for sharing
Excellent.. Thank you
Qué buen vídeo my friend👌🏻👌🏻💪
Awesome!
Thanks 👌
white balance manages blue to yellow. tint manages green to magenta. I want lightroom or camera raw for that matter to include a red to cyan slider just below them!
That would be a cool thing to have in Lightroom!