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Participant
November 25, 2022
Answered

Quality Issues, Whats wrong?

  • November 25, 2022
  • 6 replies
  • 1884 views

Hello Contributors, I need some help with my photos. I have tried to upload some photos and everytime I get this quality issue. Can anyone explain what the problem is with my photos and how I should fix it?

 

Some info how I take my photos. When I am going out to shot some pics I take some photos then I often bring up the brightness and colors in Adobe Lightroom. When I export my pictures they get denied all the time for quality issue. Please explain.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Jill_C

1. Underexposed and the flower is not sharp enough.

2. Also underexposed and blurry, and the pole in the middle of the frame is not pleasing compositionally

3. Underexposed and blurry, and the edge of the building on the right adds nothing to the composition 

4. Same as above - appears to be a crop in the previous image

5. Underexposed and very blurry.

zoom in 100-200% on your images and these issues will be readily apparent.

6 replies

Inspiring
November 27, 2022

Hi, in my experience the 'Auto' tone setting in LR doesn't provide the best results.  Below is an example of some adjustments I might have used with your photo.  Best regards, John

Abambo
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 28, 2022
quote

Hi, in my experience the 'Auto' tone setting in LR doesn't provide the best results.


By @John PDX

The auto tone feature provides good results, ist fast and easy. But indeed, there are always other interpretation possible, and sometimes a manual setting is better.

 

So, I proceed as the following:

  • I use autotone to check what that does to the picture. If I'm happy, I keep it and still do some major adjustments.
  • Most of the times, I look at the sliders, then I return to a zero situation. You need to pay attention: if you do not undo, the saturation/vibration sliders do not reset.
  • I edit the image, by striving to get a result similar to that proposed, but I normaly touch less sliders. And my edit turns out to be, in many cases, better then what was proposed.
  • The same is true with the white balance, where I like to see, what Lightroom proposes, but very often, I correct that or return to zero and move the sliders on my own. 
  • The same is true with the geometric transformations. 

The automatic functions in Lightroom are great, but you should never take those settings for the optimum. They do, however, a great job, when you have hundreds of pictures of an event that you covered, and you do not want to spend a lot of time on each picture. Here I edit only the important ones by "hand", for the rest, I trust the automation and simply mass adjust at the end the blacks and whites. 

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Abambo
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 26, 2022

Besides sharpness (correctly focussed pictures, without camera shake or moving objects, where not appropriate), correct exposure (slight exposure problems can be corrected in Lightroom), correct contrast and little noise, you also have to consider framing. A house, that is just in a corner of the picture , or a pylon, or the top of the flowers are framing errors that lead to a "technical issues" refusal.

 

You can check your exposure, by looking at the histogram (like 0686):

You see that there are no whites, and only a third of the highlights are covered. This is a highly underexposed picture that should have been corrected with the shoot settings. I mostly do bracket shooting so that I have all options when it comes to select the best exposed picture to edit.

 

As said above, do not convert your pictures to black and white. The buyer can easily convert to bw, but cannot restore the colours.

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 25, 2022

Post editing can only do so much.  Good photos begin with proper lighting and focal distance to ensure that your subject is in full focus relative to your lens size.   Many automatic cameras get confused when light conditions are poor or your frame contains multiple objects.  Using a stable tripod and manual camera settings often produces better results.

 

See below about the importance of Depth of Field in photography. 

https://photographylife.com/what-is-depth-of-field

 

Hope that helps.

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
Jill_C
Community Expert
Jill_CCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
November 25, 2022

1. Underexposed and the flower is not sharp enough.

2. Also underexposed and blurry, and the pole in the middle of the frame is not pleasing compositionally

3. Underexposed and blurry, and the edge of the building on the right adds nothing to the composition 

4. Same as above - appears to be a crop in the previous image

5. Underexposed and very blurry.

zoom in 100-200% on your images and these issues will be readily apparent.

Jill C., Forum Volunteer
RALPH_L
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 25, 2022

Photo 1 is underexposed, out of focus, has little blacks and whites and is poorly cropped.

Check these points in your other photos.

AlwinoAuthor
Participant
November 25, 2022

I usually uses custom settings in lightroom and fixing the photos in my opinion. I tried to use the auto-settings and now it looks like this:

I also laid a black and white filter on the last one.

Ricky336
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 25, 2022

Don't convert your images to greyscale!

Unfortunately, your images are too blurry - out of focus - to pass quality standards. 

All your images show a lack of focus! Probably because your shutter speed is too low to handhold at 1/60 sec. You're getting camera shake.

Henrik Heigl
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 25, 2022
AlwinoAuthor
Participant
November 25, 2022
Thank you so much. I should try that!