A Great Photograph
Making a Good Picture into a Great Photograph
By Bob Martin
Bob Martin Photography.net
Making a good picture into a Great Photograph is more than just downloading it from the camera onto your computer. It takes an eye to see what the camera did not capture right and the conditions you could not control when the picture was taken.
I took this picture on a very hot, sunny day in September, in the middle of the afternoon. I wanted to show the newlyweds dancing their first dance in the great setting of their wedding place.They were dancing near where their guests were seated and even one of the guests was taking a picture at the same time I was and was in my shot behind the couple. There was clutter in the back ground and flower petals from her bouquet on the grass, all of which I did not want in the photograph I presented to themDue to the bright sunlight and the blue sky,
the trees looked bluish green,
the mountains looked bluish brown due to the sun and haze, and the lake was not a true blue either.
On top of all that, the bride’s face was shadowed by her new husband and even her dress and his shirt and vest are faded by the shadows.
The picture would have been OK and the couple would have loved it,
but I did not.
This is the photograph that I presented to the couple. 
Their guests as well as the flower pedals are gone. The clutter in the back ground is gone and only the lone row boat remains.The trees and grass are a real green and the mountains are now showing their grandeur and the lake is now really blue.The shadow on the bride’s face is there, but not anywhere as much of a hindrance as before and the couple is brighter and their clothing is their true colors.
Did I have a “no good” camera when I took the picture?
No, I took this picture with a very fine professional grade camera. It is just that the programming in every camera will capture color shifts due to the conditions when the picture was taken and no camera or photographer can always control the background, the guests and the lighting conditions in a candid shot during your wedding.
It takes a great photo editing software and someone who has had the training with it to make the corrections.
So you see its takes more than a good camera to give you a great photograph.
Also, the creativity of editing software allows a skilled photographer to do amazing things
This is a photograph of the groom sitting at the dressing table with mirror in the lower level of the church, a fine photograph
This is the same photograph, but better
I also took one of the bride in front of the same mirror,,
I was able to take the portion of her photo of her reflection and place
it in the mirror of the groom’s photograph.
This groom was not able to see his bride until she walked down the asile, but
I wanted a shot of them in the church before their guests arrived, so
two photographs to make one presentation
First the groom in the church on the balcony without her
Then I took one of her without him and put the two together
Also note that the church chandeliers are gone,,, they were distracting.
One more exsample
I am sure you know that I did not get the bride and groom to pose on
top of their cake.
This was all done in Photoshop.
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