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Here are a couple of pictures from Natalie. The first is from the recent outing to the Butterfly Farm and the second is from the Amashovashova Cycle race the next day.This is a really nice picture of the two little girls. The lighting on them is good and, although there is a fair amount going on the background, it doesn't overpower the subjects. The girls are quite central in the picture but it doesn't bother me.
This is a nicely panned shot of this cyclist which gives the pic a good feeling of movement by blurring the background. The slowish shutter speed has also added blur to the spokes of the wheels adding to the feeling of movement and the cyclist has plenty of space to move into, which is good. The picture is a little flat, to my eye, and could have benefitted from a levels addjustment and saturation boost. I would also have cropped the yellow lampost off at the left and tried to clone out the white squarish thingy behind the bike.
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Natalie's two pictures have been compressed to the point where they are looking less than their best. This can happen when you send pictures by e-mail using the e-mail programs' automatic settings, which are usually designed to make pictures as small as possible. For display on this blog, or other website, you aim for a size of 1000-1600 pixels on the longest edge of the picture, and choose a medium or medium-high quality setting.
The best way of preparing pictures for display on the web is to size them in your usual image manipulation program. You will find that making pictures smaller often results in them losing sharpness and you might find it a good idea to give them a light sharpening before saving them using a medium or medium-high quality setting. When sending them by e-mail, you should specify that they are sent at their original size.
Click on a pic to see an enlargement
2 comments:
Forgive comment but I'm Alan Jackson, Host at The K/NIBB/S One Name Study. What a coincidence that you should post Natalie KNIBBS photos here.
And here's the other Alan's One Name Study website: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~knibbetc/page1.htm
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