Hi Maarten,mwpeters wrote: It is not that I don't like Iwan's picture, but if I remember correctly the sky was pretty blue that time of the day.
Now I have several questions:
1. Iwan, what is the reason your sky is almost grey and mine so blue?
2. What do the photographers here preffer?
3. Does the photographers here preffer pictures which represents the sky of the day, or do they preffer better light conditions on the subject? (I actually preffer my sky and Iwan´s light conditions on the F-16's)
It’s a nice subject to discuss here. I like it. Here are a few of my answers:
Blue Skies: People usually think that the skies were more bluish that a photo shows. The reason behind this mistake is that we all tend to look straight up when we check the skies while on average we are shooting just over the horizon (near horizontal). The skies overhead are always blue’er than at the horizon because of the atmosphere. Reflection of light, pollution and just the fact that horizontally there is much more air in between our camera and outer space then when looking straight up, causes the clear blue skies to show much more “milky”. Give it a try by shooting a blue sky horizontally and vertically at the same occasion. You’ll be surprised to see how grey a blue sky will look.
So much for the different shades of blue between your mind and photo.
Much more interesting is the difference in shades between your photo and mine, both take almost simultaneously from the same spot. Here are some reasons I can think about.
Hardware:
- Lenses all have their own (glass) colour. It may sound strange, but some lenses are just slightly more blue or green than others
- Sensors can make the difference. Each different type can have their own characteristics. Somewhere on this forum there is a link to test graph showing the difference in colour depth.
Software
- Camera and computer software can make the difference in recording and displaying the right colours. I used Lightroom 3.4 to process my RAW-file, but I didn’t touch the white balance and colour temperature sliders.
- Even after using identical hardware and processing software, colours can be distorted by saving in the wrong colour profile (like Adobe 1998 or sRGB). When publishing on internet, sRGB is the standard. When saved in Adobe 1998, most browsers will show your photos in a different colour than you had set it on your own screen.
Do these reasons make any sense ? Looking forward to comments and additions.
Cheers,
Iwan