Once again I will say what a joy it is to look over the shoulder and into the mind of Joe. He is a master in every sense of the word. Thank you for these opportunities.
As others have commented it really is a privilege to look over the shoulder of one of the greats of contemporary UK (and indeed the world) landscape photography. The equivalent would have been going into the darkroom of past masters. I should also add that Tim Parkin also makes a significant contribution to these videos. Maybe it's just me but the sound quality doesn't really detract at all - yes maybe a bit tinny at first but you soon get used to it.
Joe I have the privilege and honor to say that I am reading two of your books now and enjoying each more than the other. Love the vids with Tim as much as both. Best!
I just love your editing-videos! Its great to hear you discuss the options and decisions about white balance, image balance, things sticking in on edges etc. For what reason you decide to change sometings or not. Things I "discuss" with myself in my own images. A bit lonely ;-)... so perfect to me to hear your thinking about this!
Another incredibly useful one. I think the audio is only a little indistinct when both Joe & Tim are speaking at the same time, but that's a feature of natural conversation & it would be a pity to lose that
Great vid... looking at this now it seems so dated with the tech lol I wasn't that impressed when i had an a7r3.... now I have a fuji gfx... the quality of file, colour and texture is amazing... so little processing necessary.
Once again I will say what a joy it is to look over the shoulder and into the mind of Joe. He is a master in every sense of the word. Thank you for these opportunities.
Time spent listening to and watching Joe Cornish's process always pays large dividends. Thanks so much for this video.
As others have commented it really is a privilege to look over the shoulder of one of the greats of contemporary UK (and indeed the world) landscape photography. The equivalent would have been going into the darkroom of past masters. I should also add that Tim Parkin also makes a significant contribution to these videos. Maybe it's just me but the sound quality doesn't really detract at all - yes maybe a bit tinny at first but you soon get used to it.
Joe I have the privilege and honor to say that I am reading two of your books now and enjoying each more than the other. Love the vids with Tim as much as both. Best!
These videos are priceless! I love the the quiet presentation and the thought that goes into them- Thanks a million.
I just love your editing-videos! Its great to hear you discuss the options and decisions about white balance, image balance, things sticking in on edges etc. For what reason you decide to change sometings or not. Things I "discuss" with myself in my own images. A bit lonely ;-)... so perfect to me to hear your thinking about this!
I have to say regarding the first image in the forest, the the color version is my preference. I love the soft green tint...
As always, awesome video and contents! Brilliant!
What a great piece of education!
Great video. Awesome insight into Joes editing work flow
Thankyou chaps, an interesting discourse ..... DW is never one to pass on a photo-opp.
Another incredibly useful one. I think the audio is only a little indistinct when both Joe & Tim are speaking at the same time, but that's a feature of natural conversation & it would be a pity to lose that
Great vid... looking at this now it seems so dated with the tech lol I wasn't that impressed when i had an a7r3.... now I have a fuji gfx... the quality of file, colour and texture is amazing... so little processing necessary.
Great content, but the audio was not the best.
Audio could definitely be improved. And it's unclear to me when Joe uses Capture One instead of Lightroom.
Audio is bad, sorry I have to pass.