These are great as they are, I wouldn't touch them.
Love these photos like another said mat frame done Great job
I agree with those who say there is nothing to fix. But what we think doesn't matter. What does your granddaughter think?
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These images are beautiful, as is the subject. There's nothing I'd want to do with these other than frame them.
--Bob
lovelylyn wrote:
Took these photo of my granddaughter but most were underexposed tried fixing but not very good. How can I fix these.
They both are great portraits of your beautiful granddaughter. If you shoot in RAW you can always make adjustments in post processing. (I look at this as being my dark room on the computer but allowing me to be more imaginative.) The sidelight is very well used. The exposure is a personal thing but for me it is spot on. Enlarge your photographs, frame them and hang them on your wall.
Try again with a side lite (or reflector) on the dark side of the face. To me, looks like that's all you'd need.
A couple of minutes in Adobe Camera Raw filter and another minute or so doing spotting with the spot-healing brush tool and I think there is the improvement you are looking for. I have added attachment. hope it goes through.
People of darker skin tones need about a 1/3 exposure increase
lovelylyn wrote:
Took these photo of my granddaughter but most were underexposed tried fixing but not very good. How can I fix these.
I'm not getting the impression of underexposure with the two, to me it looks a lot more like an intended exposure in both images. Please explain a bit more in detail about your issue! The only gripe I may have, is the composition in the second shot.
nothing wrong in those 2 pictures .
Shadowy has its place, and these are perfectly acceptable as they are (perhaps the saturation's a bit strong in #1).
I like the top one. Beautiful shot. If you are asking about some technical stuff, the camera metered itself off the left side of the set. The dynamic range between the dark and light was too great for a camera to capture. Your eye can see it because the human eye can see a dynamic range of 8 or 9. Cameras with film can only see 2-3, and some digital cameras can see 4-5. If you lit it, then you would have to deal with a flat image.
I think it looks great just the way it is. Frame it.
Maybe they could be improved, I don't know how or where, as they are just super the way they are, especially #1.
chevman
Loc: Matthews, North Carolina
lovelylyn wrote:
Took these photo of my granddaughter but most were underexposed tried fixing but not very good. How can I fix these.
lovelylyn, Both of these photos are wonderful, and you have a lovely grand daughter. Upon my first look I was wondering what was wrong with these that made you dissatisfied? I like the shadow, and the lighting just looks great if I were to change anything I think I would just do a little crop, and darken the background on the second photo. Both my wife and I liked both of these pictures and agreed that if anything was to be done than a simple crop would do it. So here it is also I darkened the background adding more depth so she would be the focal point.
The 1st one... with her bare upper arm... lovely lovely lovely!! My thoughts: don't change it 1 iota.
The 2nd one is excellent,too.
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