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Posts Tagged ‘Burano’

As I mentioned in yesterday’s post, I’ve decided to alternate between freshly processed images from my recent European trip and selections from my back catalogue, just to spice things up a bit and create more variation.

So today you get two shots of contrasting walls from the insanely colourful Italian island of Burano in the Venetian lagoon, taken last March.

This place is famous for its gaudy and over-the-top house decor – imagine a village in which every dwelling is painted in a dazzling shade with complete disregard to the colours of those surrounding it, and that’s Burano.

These bright colours may look fake, but I can assure you that these pictures have no post-processing whatsoever – that’s really how it was!

I clearly remember this visit, since it was raining at the beginning, and while waiting for things to improve I sneaked into a local cake shop and stuffed a few pastries into my gut. After this my sticky fingers got cream and jam all over my Nikon…

Lots of fun!

Bigger versions of these pictures here and here.

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I finally got my hands on Nik Software’s Complete Collection yesterday, which was pretty exciting, as I’d heard only good things about these products, and the black and white converter I’d tried as a demo is excellent.

So, for a first test run, I’d thought I’d revisit Photo of the Day #20, my shot of the Venetian lagoon from the island of Burano, and see if I could improve it with this suite of new technological wizardry.

Here’s the original picture, with post-processing done in Aperture 3, which consisted of a bit of edge sharpening, some level adjustments, saturation and contrast tweaks. Click on the picture to see a bigger version.

I reverted back to the original JPEG (yes, folks, I don’t shoot RAW), then worked my way through the suggested workflow for the Complete Collection.

First up, I put it through Dfine 2.0, a noise reduction utility. To be honest, I couldn’t really notice any difference afterwards – perhaps because the photo was shot at ISO 100 and so wasn’t too noisy to begin with?

Next came Viveza 2.0, a tool for selectively adjusting colour and light. I think I just darkened the sky a bit.

Next, the main event – Color Efex Pro 3.0, an amazing collection of digital filters. I guessed some kind of graduated filter would help to enhance the sky, and after playing around with various configurations, I came up with something that I think adds impact without being too unnatural.

Finally, I launched Sharpener Pro 3.0 and cranked things up a bit: I think I may actually have over done it, but never mind.

Here’s the result. Better? Or too over the top? I’ll let you decide…Click on the picture to see a bigger version.

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It was a rainy day when I headed out for the tiny island of Burano in the Venetian lagoon. After walking through the canals lined with insanely colourful fisherman’s houses, the clouds broke as I came upon this superb view. Perfect for the 10-24mm wide-angle lens, I was glad I hadn’t abandoned the trip due to the bad weather forecast. It pays to be patient in photography.

A larger version of this picture can viewed here at my dedicated website and store, Andy Lightfoot Photography.

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