Sometimes when things are slow and the three year old has absolutely no interest in having his picture taken, I'll go back and reprocess old photos to see how I can apply new techniques or just give a picture a different look. As much as I love being out there and taking the actual pictures, I look forward to processing them just as much. It's funny, I think a lot of people think that a photographer's job pretty much ends when they put the lens cap back on, but really, the hour or two at the session taking pictures is by far the quickest part. After that comes the hours of editing, processing, tweaking, and fine tuning. Sure, you hope that your images come straight out of the camera looking great, without needing much work. But in reality, if you shoot RAW, every single image needs adjustments since the camera doesn't do the work for you like it would if you shot jpegs. Whether it's just a quick contrast boost and some sharpening, or something more involved, RAW images have to be given life. And because I love to see before and after examples, here are a few of my own. These are urban shots taken a while ago that I wanted to revisit, and as you can see, I went for a vivid, high key look here. If these were shots of a sweet little girl in a dress, in a field of flowers, I obviously wouldn't process them this way. That's the beauty of it, you can do just a little, or go a little over the top!
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkzWSwmV_tR8ayCVmtud9j-2zeSiY_N6TkvctIpRSjKEKos2dGAtud7bIO0TFNkeEJRpvbY5yU_slK9UPxAbH-uwmO-NvrQ4JFWZUqqpEyiEfQ4ljTSpSNC6I7B8TWaeGpQKlOcilOSNw/s400/Kai+3+b_a.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgAuDvflpMYUFC0I0ExpYGy5yR01H5o3P7eScu0LtJhgVc9rnPe8PnZKjoQS6uQ2Q1tEX9C37Z-ds_G309PIWCZ7y5t-6zRQBND61JxEdCQifJxFFAK5mx8Ehk6tweAgO5xxKUMnEZpiVw/s400/Kai+1+b_a.jpg)
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![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj9nbbw1A_5pwINolXMFDMqNL5d9QzYlzYv_Fp6lNjcUXbf2sw7UH41iVKQ3ZgvAphVvR5FlqSo7SUQXlSVUd17OS5h3nTHss2s5Gb9zD3Wq3hd9K9qZ3PLMACu77R_kD_yKCqLHWJ-Rnk/s400/Kai+2+b_a.jpg)
So, if you have an SLR, play around some time with shooting RAW and see what you can do. The best part is, you always have the original image, untouched, to work with if you ever want to go back months later (like I always do) and rework it. And I know Google's pretty much the only thing reading this blog, but if you like these kind of posts, leave a comment, let me know, and I'm happy to keep doing them!
2 comments:
I LOVE this kind of "tip sheet" Christine! Thanks! I totally wanna buy lightbox now :)
I mean lightROOM :)
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