Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Practicing Black & White Stills: Girlies

Today I took some shots of Saxon (who was nearby at the time) and some of Luke so I could fiddle around with contrast and effects on Photoshop, partially just to practise using Photoshop as thusfar I have only used Jasc's Paint Shop Pro 7 & 9. It was also intended to investigate how to create the black and white filmic effect crucial to create the film noir aesthetic.

Edited shot:


Original shot:



What I did: I cropped the image, airbrushed it a wee bit, used the 'despeckle' tool (in order to remove some of the noise that I found showed up more once the contrast had been upped), and then I increased the contrast and brightness and then greyscaled the image. I also added a gaussian blur effect but cannot remember when I did this.

What I think about the end result: While possibly a bit striking the image is far too... grainy? Basically its very blotchy and not at all like the smooth, flawless images of the films we are trying to imitate.

What I think went wrong: There is probably something technical that would help this or that I should have used, but I think the main problem lies in the poor lighting of the original image. I think it needs to be brighter, less diffuse light (this shot was only taken by a window on an overcast afternoon).

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Later today I took some shots of Cat, seeing as she's the actual femme fatale.

Here is one of the original shots:

First attempt at editing:

What I did: I removed some of the noise to try and make it look 'smoother', upped the contrast and greyscaled it.

What I think: I think it's better than the last attempt as Cat was standing closer to the window. I think it looks a little bit strange in the way that the shadow falling over half of her face is in almost an exact half and half line, but maybe that's just because the light was still quite diffuse?

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