Author: Rich Leighton
•9:14 AM
Hey Everyone!

I've been procrastinating like crazy on what to start with, so I thought I'd just post a few recent photos to "get the ball rolling".

These are all examples of my work, after it has gone through the editing process - meaning Lightroom, Photoshop, Nik Software, as well as a few other tools I use depending on what I'm trying to create. Lately I've been using the Mogrify plug-in for Lightroom to make cool borders with my own personal watermark.

What I'm going to do, as an intro to this blog, is briefly describe what I did to get this photo to look the way it does. I don't have the "raw"photos handy, and want to get this off quickly, so I'll just show the post-processed photos for now. I hope this might get some of you pointed in the right direction - learning where to start with digital photography is often the hardest part!

(*NOTE - If any of this is confusing, I will go into more detail in future blogs on exactly what steps I use to get these images. This is meant to be a general overview on technique, not instruction)


Florida's capitol building in Tallahassee. This is a very simple shot - often something an amateur or beginning photographer would shoot. I wanted to make ordinary into spectacular - so I made a fake lens flare :-) Shhhhhhh ..... don't tell anybody it's not real! You can make a lens flare if you are artistic, or use some of Photoshop's tools to make one, then use it as a layer to place it on top of your image.

My wife, son and I were on a trip recently to the Atlantic coast on the Florida/Georgia state border to photograph birds, and we ended up at this Civil War/Seminole War era fort (Fort Clinch). I was doing a little HDR work when this man in an old sergeant uniform walked up and said hello. My wife prompted me to ask him to pose, which he was very happy to. Now - how do I get this image to look so old?

First thing - use any sepia setting or preset, then darken the edges AND lighten the center. There are plenty of "film" presets that will also let you add grain to the photo to make it look aged. Last thing - lighten up all the shadows. You never see solid black in these old images.


This old mill in Central Florida was a great subject for a photograph. I wanted to do something very different with it - in the sense that many photographers see an old building and go "Wow! that's just beautiful!", then change it into something else with editing (often sepias or black&whites like the last image)

For this one, I wanted bright color! I pushed the saturation in the yellows, blues, and greens, and sharpened the whole image for lots of detail. I already had a lot because I used a tripod, but I needed all the detail I could get because I was going to blur the edges, which I did, for an odd sort of contrast. Vignette blur - then a traditional square vignette on top of it.


This guy was a classical guitarist I found on Craigslist.org who was looking for a photographer to provide some shots for a project he was working on. This was a simple edit. I blurred the edges and added a square vignette like the last photo, then used Photoshop to get rid of all the color except his guitar. Just a little contrast tweaking was needed to finish it off!


Back to Fort Clinch .... I had a blast with HDR phtography (High Dynamic Range). I spent quite a bit of time on this photo, but essentially this is five different images taken with a tripod, each at a different exposure. Then through digital imaging, I was able to combine them into one image eliminating all the bright highlights and dark shadows. Then I adjusted the hues, clarity, vibrancy, and with a little cropping, had this super-high resolution image of a very significant piece of history of my home state.

I would really appreciate feedback and comments on what you think of this blog. I'm going to try all kinds of ideas with this blog, and it won't always be about photography, but art as a whole. I will welcome guest bloggers, opinions, new ideas, and different techniques and ideas.

Cheers!

Rich.
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Author: Rich Leighton
•11:18 PM
Greetings and welcome to our first blog!

We are Rich and Galina Leighton (a family photography and digital art business in Tallahassee, Florida), and we will be broadcasting to the world all the things that we find cool, interesting, inspiring, that relate to (and) how we create our images.

The purpose of this blog is is to:
  • Draw attention to our website www.leightonphotography.com
  • Show other photographers how we go through the photo editing process
  • give away freebies - downloadable presets and other creative tools we make for our own workflow
  • enable a good way for us to receive some feedback on some of our "experiments"
  • inspire others to push their own creative limits :-)
We will show you some of the steps we go through to go from the above photographic setup, to taking the best images needed to be transformed in the digital darkroom.

... to create images like these examples of how we turn ordinary photography into something special!


Even if you are not an artist, photographer, etc, you are not excluded!
This is meant to inspire, entertain, and possibly light a spark in you that you might never have known was there .... in other words - get your creative juices flowing!

Creatively yours,
Rich and Galina Leighton


We are looking forward to hearing you comments, suggestions and feedback! Don't forget to sign up for our RSS feed in the top right menu (look for the little orange square icon).
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