Here’s a situation that happened to me last week, on the 6th full day of a South-East Alaska cruise: we’re sailing through fog, right up to the Hubbard Glacier. When we get up to it, everything is spectacular – calving at regular intervals (that’s the breaking off of ice into the ocean), deep blues… how to show this?
Well, even with proper exposure, you’ll end up with a fairly flat, even grey pic. The problem is that everything is a dingy white, and the sensor will try to dirty it down. You can alter your exposure, but it won’t really matter – you’ll still end up with a flat image, short on the color that you actually see.
In the case of this picture, here are the steps to resurrecting it:
- Tweak around the general exposure & some of the contrast in Adobe Raw. Don’t overdo it.
- Open in Photoshop, and duplicate (<cmd/ctrl>-J) the bottom layer.
- Open levels (<cmd/ctrl>-L), and bring in the high & low markers to fringe the actual histogram (to the very edges of where it starts).
- Open Viveza and drop points across the sky. Desaturate slightly and darken.
- Drop points across the ice, too. Increase saturation (very slightly) and contrast.
- Resize, sharpen and save.
In this case, I took it a little overboard on the glacier. This was deliberate – otherwise the splash from falling ice gets completely lost.
