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Participant
August 19, 2022
Answered

Feedback on rejected

  • August 19, 2022
  • 3 replies
  • 1727 views

Hello,

I was wondering if I could get some feedback on this rejected photo.

Reason for rejection: Quality Issue

K

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Nancy OShea

I don't think there's sufficient light for commercial print purposes. See histogram in Photoshop.

 

 

As a quick & dirty experiment, I copied layer, applied a level adjustment layer to brighten exposure on everything.  Then created a layer mask and painted with a soft round brush at opacity of 61% and flow of 56% to bring back some contours and shadows.  It's not perfect but you get the general idea. 

 

 

Hope that helps.

 

3 replies

Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Nancy OSheaCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
August 19, 2022

I don't think there's sufficient light for commercial print purposes. See histogram in Photoshop.

 

 

As a quick & dirty experiment, I copied layer, applied a level adjustment layer to brighten exposure on everything.  Then created a layer mask and painted with a soft round brush at opacity of 61% and flow of 56% to bring back some contours and shadows.  It's not perfect but you get the general idea. 

 

 

Hope that helps.

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
Participant
August 20, 2022

I’m very sorry, but your approach/PS tools used are very amateur. As Adobe Expert you’d better work with curves to provide needed contrast for concerning details (in highlights and in shadows too). Of course, having in mind that in sunrise light conditions initial R and G,B channels are very different and require different curve modifications. Of course, in RAW, not in compressed JPG (I’ve used for example only). Your mask + amateur PS toolset approach leads to digitally not natural and flat picture (sorry again).

Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 20, 2022

I'm not doing a Photoshop tutorial.  As I said, it's a quick & dirty example that took under 3 minutes, far from perfect.  More of a starting point than a final product. 😉

 

That said, @Kirsten2571969029mz can take what she will from it.  We are unpaid forum volunteers and product users.  We're not here to do in-depth photo editing for contributors. That's the photographer's job. 🙂

 

To delve deeper into Photoshop & Lightroom, YouTube has some good tutorials by Photoshop Training Channel (PTC) and piXimperfect.

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
Jill_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 19, 2022

My initial reaction is that the shadows are underexposed.

Jill C., Forum Volunteer
Participant
August 19, 2022

Hi, you had very strong contrast situation/scene and you've done almost good work with exposition etc. (IMHO). If you go to curves you could see a little bit overeposed red ch., not OK contrast for green and blue (in RGB that I'd frefer for this img, not CMYK or LAB). I've done few clicks with curves to up shadows (dog etc.), down red overexp.(sun&sky) and set BB acc. to *grey* stowns (of course, they are not in such light cond.)) for illustration only (it'd prefer to work with RAW, not JPG preview) - like Den Margulys recommends us:))

 

AND I'm (as a photographer with almost 40 years experience, in general, from film times)) realy wondering of current Adobe Stock *experts* and their rejections. If they are only iphone shoters for *insta* I can accept that they do not understand/know what is right exposition (w/o strong highlights overexp.), contrast, DOF, esp. for telelenses, BB etc., etc. Even digital amateur newcomers know well enough such basics.

For example, look at this Adobe Stock *bestsellers*:

- https://stock.adobe.com/uk/images/picturesque-sunset-over-a-mountain-valley-background-wallpaper/521281130    with strong highlights overexp./not OK hystogram, strange BB and blicks/reflections from chip filter (lens).

 

-https://stock.adobe.com/uk/stock-photo/id/488327479?asset_id=490181289   what a hell is going on with highlights overexp. around painted/effect *sun* in dull sky?!! Lock at shadows and you'll understand in a second where true sun was! What about horizon and composition at all?.. I think that's not PHOTOGRAPHY..

 
 

 

 

Participant
August 19, 2022

My last comment was related to another *shot* in the group acc. link below, so I've attached its printscreen for sure:

-https://stock.adobe.com/uk/stock-photo/id/488327479?asset_id=490181289   what a hell is going on with highlights overexp. around painted/effect *sun* in dull sky?!! Lock at shadows and you'll understand in a second where true sun was!

 

 
 

 

 

Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 20, 2022

@Dmytro25720280qh4w wrote:

 

By the way, I’m sure that even modern/digital expert would have certain experience with film photography


Why should they? Digital photography is long enough around, that younger persons have no experience with film. 


Most 20-30 year olds have never held a film camera.  Since 2003, digital cameras have outsold film camerasKodak stopped making film cameras in January 2004. 

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert