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Spend a Year in Colorado

Even though we just embarked on a New Year, Steinberg Photography is looking ahead to 2016. Our yearly calendars encapsulate the unforgettable moments that we feel deserve to be shared. In this image of Whiteley Peak in Grand County, Colorado, we captured a sunrise worthy of a thousand words. The cotton candy hue cast over the mountain made for a blissful morning even a cup of the best locally roasted coffee couldn’t enhance.

 

Whiteley Peak is located in the Gore Range, one of the most rugged mountain ranges in Colorado. From all of Colorado’s spectacular mountains, Whiteley Peak offers a scenic vantage point for Colorado’s glorious landscape. On the lower slopes, there are beautiful and serene lakes and meadows for hikers to explore year-round.

 

Award-winning photographers Jim & Lori Steinberg plan adventurous explorations of culture and wildlife to capture stunning photographs that are sure to impress every month of the year. Until the 2016 calendar is ready, you can purchase your 2015 calendar here.

How much is too much Post Processing in Photography?

We live in the age of Instagram filters and Photoshop®. Most images we see are processed in some way and altered. But how much is too much post processing in photography? As it turns out, this question is at the center of a lively debate in the world of photography.

What is Post Processing in Photography?

Post processing is editing a picture after it has been taken, usually with software like Photoshop® or one of the many other post-production applications or plug-ins available today. Post processing can include adding effects, like in the pictures in this blog, or small fixes like rotating an image so it’s level, cropping the image to create a new composition, varying highlight and shadow details or adding or removing brightness.

Experienced photographers can get their camera to do more things while they are taking the picture. They know their camera settings like the back of their hand. But that is only the first step and doesn’t mean that they don’t use post processing techniques to bring an image to the finish line and take it from ordinary to extraordinary.

Pictures Representing Reality

Purists argue that photographs are meant to represent reality, that they are reality, and therefore shouldn’t be touched up or enhanced. But pictures have never been reality. They are only an interpretation of reality.  

There is no finer example of this than Ansel Adams, the original black and white photography master manipulator. His photographs express the essence and emotion of a scene not necessarily the reality of what was in front of his camera.  

Long before there was Photoshop®, photographers such as Adams and Weston altered their images. They just used razors, bits of paper to burn and dodge, brushes, and experimented with different chemicals, mixing ratios, types of paper, and timing.

The apparent size, shape and color of objects, as well as the distance between objects, can all be manipulated by the photographer with focal length, framing of the picture, and the angle at which the photograph is taken. Experimenting with exposure times can turn day into night or night into day.

So long as you use post processing to create an interesting and engaging image, there’s no such thing as too much. The only thing that matters in photography is the quality of the image.

Be creative with post processing in photography, but remember: The more you learn about your camera and how to use its many different settings, the more you’re likely to get from post processing. Or, the better the image is out of the box, the easier it is to deal with in post.

Learn and Travel with Steinberg Photography

Interested in honing your skills on a photography adventure with professional photographers Jim and Lori Steinberg of Steinberg Photography? We offer numerous exciting workshops and tours that are great for everyone from beginners to professionals.

See where we’re heading next!

Your Guide to Taking Dreamy Portraits

Taking dreamy portraits, like any creative photography project, requires both skill and imagination. Portrait photography gives you endless opportunities to create artistic dreamscapes and enchanting worlds out of the seemingly ordinary. This blog will give you some tips to create a world that feels surreal and dreamlike.

Surreal Locations

Where you are shooting sets the tone for the image you want to create. What sort of places do you visit in your dreams? How do you see them?  Abandoned buildings, graffiti lined alleyways, landscapes, or abandoned railroad tracks can all set the tone for a great dreamy portrait.

Using Light

Lens Flares

Portraits provide an awesome opportunity to use the rays of the sun to create lens flares. With a bit of practice, this is a fun technique to master.

Using the live view screen to protect your eyes, position your lens with the sun in the frame then slowly move the camera until concentric circles appear. Adjust your position until you can clearly see the details of your subject’s face along with the presence of the flare.

To give more well defined rays, use a smaller aperture. Use a wider aperture to give you a more blown-out look.

You should use a spot meter as you would when shooting portraits near windows as your subject will be backlit. For extra lighting use a reflector, whiteboard or a touch of fill flash.

Soft Light

Seek out soft lighting. Shooting outside when it’s overcast (being careful to protect your equipment should that turn to rain) is a perfect opportunity to create dreamy portraits. The clouds block the bright sun, and they diffuse the light more evenly, creating an effect similar to a studio softbox.

For angelic-like faces, you can have your subject stand in front of a window, and for studio-like lighting you can have them stand beside the window. Experiment with using the window light to create different dreamy effects, and you can point your spot meter towards your model’s face to make sure they’re not underexposed. Or, use a reflector, whiteboard or fill flash to direct more light towards them.

Techniques

Use a Shallow Depth of Field

There’s nothing like a blurry background to replicate a dreamlike state! Switch your camera to aperture priority mode and choose a wide aperture. Use the narrow focus to make sure your subjects eyes are sharp, and let everything else blur into the background to create a dreamy portrait.

Experiment with Exposure

Try shooting at low shutter speeds. You can use a long exposure to intentionally blur elements of your shot to create neat effects.

You’ll want to use your tripod, of course, and set your camera to speed priority mode. Start with 1/5th of a second or slower and experiment to find the best blur. You can have your subject move just one body part, or play with lights to create trippy trails.

A dimly lit location will provide the best results in order to avoid over-exposure.

Join Us for a Photography Adventure  

Leave us your contact information on our Workshops & Photo Tours page, and we’ll send you more info!

 

Unparalleled Adventures in Africa

With the spray of mist catching in the warm spring South African air from the waves breaking against the rocks, the Cape of Good Hope is the physical form of serenity. The rocky headland on the Atlantic coast of the Cape Peninsula, South Africa, was particularly invigorating that afternoon, and we were lucky enough to catch a couple of indigenous visitors during our shoot.

Having been settled by the Dutch to use as a stopping point for trading ships, the Cape of Good Hope was first sighted by Portuguese navigator Bartolomeu Dias in 1488. While sailing the high seas, Dias discovered that India could be reached by sea from Europe. Because this discovery was such good fortune, the UNESCO World Heritage Site received its name. Now a scenic backdrop to the pulsing city of Cape Town, the Cape of Good Hope is even more beautiful than the picture.

If you’d like to experience it for yourself, we still have room on our once-in-a-lifetime trip in May. You’ll join award-winning photographers Jim & Lori Steinberg on an adventurous exploration of culture, art, dining and wildlife. View South Africa through a lens that even Nikon can’t capture. This trip is designed to liberate your talents, whatever level they may be on, and expose you to a world you never imagined being invited into. To learn more about this wondrous opportunity, contact us today. You’ll be glad you did.

Weekly Photo Challenge: NEW!

New Coat for the New Year!

This image was captured on the very first day of the year 2014 and continues to serve as the symbol for a new year, new adventures and new starts! We see the fresh coat and are reminded of all the fresh starts we get with the turn of a new year. https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_photo_challenge/new/

 

Welcome 2015! Happy New Year to you and yours! May your year be filled with prosperity, new dreams, fresh starts, happiness and health!

 

Steamboat Springs

Winter is upon us! The barren trees surrounding Winter Creek in Steamboat Springs are beautifully covered in pure white snow. The water of the river is beginning to freeze over, but not completely as there still is a faint trickle of flowing water in this gentle stream.

 

Field of wildflowers

 

 

 

     It’s cold out here in Colorado. On such a blustery, snowy day, we thought it would be nice to take a little look back this week to the warmth and colors of summer. A week full of colors and warmth should be quite refreshing!

 

 

 

Today we share a shot of a field of wildflowers (Asteraceae) blooming on the Bureau of Land Management land on Cinnamon Pass of the Colorado Scenic Byway in front of the vast Arnica Mountains. Very interestingly, in a sea of yellow wildflowers, there is but one spot of pink.

 

 

 

Gentleman reading

 

 

 

 

    We captured this gentleman reading one afternoon in Havana, Cuba. He was positioned perfectly between the openings on the other side of the wall. We wanted to focus in on him, the subject of the photo, and drown out the surrounding objects.

 

 

Dancer in Havana

 

 

 

    As we close out the year, we wanted to take this time to share some images of the magnificent people and places we have encountered that we hadn’t been able to fit in the remainder of the year. Stayed tuned this week and next for a collection of some of our favorite images of 2014!

 

Today we share this shot of a dancer in Havana, Cuba standing perfectly under the light shining down on her and invoking a deep emotional radiance to all in her presence.

 

 

 

 

Mistaya River

  •     The Mistaya River, coming out of Petyo Lake, carries enough glacial flour downriver along with it that the water has an amazing turquoise cast to it. It narrows here, forming this wonderful rapid as it carves its way down to its junction with the Saskatchewan River.

 

 

 

Whirlpool River

 

 

 

The Whirlpool River is a short river in Jasper National Park, formed in Athabasca Pass which collects meltwater from the Hooker Icefield and the Mount Brown Icefield. In this photo, the waters look like thick fog rolling in over the river rocks with the reflections of light shining down creating a myriad of colors throughout. The colors of the sky are nearly identical to those of the water — its almost hard to tell up from down!

 

 

 

 

 

 

    

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