Thank you, Michael. I can think of quite a few times this technique would have helped me in the past. It is nice to have another tool available to me when I want to add some mystique to one of my projects.
It's always good to know many techniques and have them in the toolbox. The art is to choose the right one based on personal taste ;-) My taste is: I like it with the misty atmosphere.
@@mibreit-photo From my point of view, this technique would be ok if there was at least a little bit of haze in the foto and you wanted to amplify it. But in the raw there is no haze at all, in this foto it simply makes no sense as it no longer has anything to do with reality
@@tomdriftwood3674 I agree, it's a bit beyond reality. This location is common with fog and mist though, even at the time I visited. Unfortunately not during this visit. But I hear you. I'm also always hesitant with such changes. But for a few photos, I like to get a bit more creative than reality would allow. And 50% of the reason behind the edit, to be honest, was having something cool for a TH-cam video to show *gg*
I mentioned this: Not that good for Landscapes, but Check my Lightroom pro Tip - better for Landscapes th-cam.com/video/ZW-OMKyj4do/w-d-xo.htmlsi=wK0VjHVENm8m4Jl2
Very nice ! thanks !
This did blow my mind, have to try it out
Genial, ich wäre nie auf die Idee gekommen den Neural Filter so zu verwenden
War eher Zufall beim stöbern in Photoshop
Thank you, Michael. I can think of quite a few times this technique would have helped me in the past. It is nice to have another tool available to me when I want to add some mystique to one of my projects.
Cool effect, I could see this coming in very useful.
Thank you for sharing
Thank you Michael always good to have a new edit to use for this type of shot.
Very nice technique. Thank you.
To be frank, I like the raw better than the edited version
It's always good to know many techniques and have them in the toolbox. The art is to choose the right one based on personal taste ;-) My taste is: I like it with the misty atmosphere.
@@mibreit-photo From my point of view, this technique would be ok if there was at least a little bit of haze in the foto and you wanted to amplify it. But in the raw there is no haze at all, in this foto it simply makes no sense as it no longer has anything to do with reality
@@tomdriftwood3674 I agree, it's a bit beyond reality. This location is common with fog and mist though, even at the time I visited. Unfortunately not during this visit. But I hear you. I'm also always hesitant with such changes. But for a few photos, I like to get a bit more creative than reality would allow.
And 50% of the reason behind the edit, to be honest, was having something cool for a TH-cam video to show *gg*
I agree with @tomdriftwood3674 Michael. The technique is interesting but unfortunately wholly mis-matched to the photo@@mibreit-photo
Sup Frank
Hello ! Thank you for lesson, but where can i get the original image for processing ?
Those tutorials are intended to be used on your own photos ;-)
Fantastic tutorial. Does this trick work with landscape images as well to add atmosphere?
I mentioned this: Not that good for Landscapes, but Check my Lightroom pro Tip - better for Landscapes th-cam.com/video/ZW-OMKyj4do/w-d-xo.htmlsi=wK0VjHVENm8m4Jl2
Great tip, thank you!:-)
Thank you
I think it needs the usual, do the edit, come back 10min later and back it off a little.
Sometimes it Go Back through those images a month later and reduce the effects;-)
For me, I'd have to come back and adjust for sure. It always looks too good at first.