I once shot a snow scene and when printed I thought wqhy is it so blue. I went back to the scene and it was blue. Our brains tell us snow is white, so that's the way we see it.
If you have CS5, then the book "Photoshop CS5 the missing manual" will answer all your questions.
I think that will make a wonderful Christmas card!
Back in film days these people were known as "lens louses. I was accosted by one of these at a wedding shoot, so I shot him "on thew slide". I was using a Crown Graphic camera, which is a bellows rtype camera using sheet film. These cameras usewd film holders in the back of the camera. they had slides that you removed when taking the shot. If you "shoot on the slide" the film is not exposed.
As composition goes, any "rule" should vbge seen as a guide only, not a hard and fast rule. Art is judged by the effect on the viewer.
The 3 dimensional look of the moon is elegant!
I think I can see that it is on a slope, but I would make the fence posts vertical, as that is how fence posts are put in.
jpeg is a lossy format. If you have a choice, use tif to avoid loss.
Ignore One Eyed Jack, Asking questions is a time honored way to learn. I am 79 years old and have been in more than one profession and I'm still learning. Good Luck!
Ignore One Eyed Jack, Asking questions is a time honored way to learn. I am 79 years old and have been in more than one preofession and I'm still learning. Good Luck!
I think that is on the Oregon coast near Reedsport. I have a picture of it too.
Erv wrote:
California coast
Erv
You are right. Photomerge is where you make panoramas
My vote is for NAPP membership. They have many tutorials on line and you can become familiar with many of the instructors.
You are refering to panorama in PS where the button saying remove ghosts eliminates moving objects from all but one of the units. If you want to remove a person from a photo, use "content aware fill". A good reference for Photo Shop CS 5 is "Photo Shop CS5 The Missing Manual