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Collection: Architecture Camera: Canon PowerShot A620 Date: Jul 7, 2006 Aperture: 3.2 ISO: 100 Shutter: 1/15 Galleries: Abstract, Architecture Date Uploaded: Jul 19, 2006
Viewed: 1293
Comments: 7
Favorites: 2 (view)
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I took this while looking for perspective III entries.
This is my office building (lucky me!). There are two grand spiral staircases in it that are 7 stories high.
I learned a lot while taking and prepping this shot, so I'll explain all of this in more detail than you want in hopes it helps some other newbie learn. :)
I started by looking for ideas from the previous two perspective challenges. I thought of my building immediately when I saw the spiral staircase red ribbon winner in the second one.
I originally tried to get the whole spiral into the photo, but there's a chandelier going right through the middle of it. Since I was shooting near the end of the day, and I have no lights, that meant I couldn't get the shadows to show up without blowing out the chandelier's lights. Lesson one from DPC. :) So I cut them out of several shots.
As I started editing this, I realized I had these great secondary curves formed by the friction striping that keeps people from slipping. That clinched it for me to choose one of these.
The main light is a series of windows that go down one side. Avoiding them in the background was lesson two from comments I've received and seen on DPC.
Since I was holding the camera, I had a conflict between low light and noisy ISO. On many of my shots, I went with 100 and deliberately underexposed a stop. On this one, it turned out okay even handheld at 1/15 because I was bracing against the handrail (my level on the staircase is out of the frame).
My editing resulted from more lessons from DPC:
Noise reduction (community version of Noiseware)
USM before doing anything else (thanks to the great tutorials on how to prep a file and on how to use USM: //www.dpchallenge.com/tutorial.php?TUTORIAL_ID=26 and //www.dpchallenge.com/tutorial.php?TUTORIAL_ID=4)
Cropping to remove a distractingly visible wall
Using curves to brighten it up while keeping the detail in the highlights (the railing is too bright, but it came out of the camera that way) //www.luminous-landscape.com/tutorials/command_primer.shtml
(I deliberately kept the color warmer than it really appeared to emphasize the brass in the railing)
Resizing and USM again, but less this time
Exporting to JPG
I reshot this for the Shapes III challenge and won my first ribbon:
I've taken several other images of the same staircase. This one is my favorite, but here they are:
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Author | Thread |
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02/09/2007 06:21:37 AM |
I think this is my favorite too. I love that crop, it just falls into place perfectly in your eyes :) Such a striking, powerful staircase!
I love photos like this! |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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02/08/2007 04:34:25 PM |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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11/28/2006 08:14:46 AM |
This is beautiful!! Lucky you to have this to photograph any time you want. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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11/21/2006 08:26:03 PM |
I love this one! Wonderful lighting and detail! I'd be on this staircase ALL the time, taking shots from every floor and angle. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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10/22/2006 07:46:55 PM |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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08/15/2006 04:31:47 AM |
screw the DOF...the abstraction is superb! |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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07/18/2006 10:57:39 PM |
Cool shot, well composed. I think you needed a little more DOF, I see you used f3.2. Did you try this hand-held? |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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