Old Salem Interior

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  • 02-17-2004, 01:09 PM
    merckxman
    1 Attachment(s)
    Old Salem Interior
    This shot was taken last Thanksgiving in the Single Men's Home at Old Salem in Winston-Salem, NC. I particularly like the warmth of the colors in the shot and how the natural light coming through the old window creates a very soft glow. Taken with Kodak HD 400 on my Nikon N80.
  • 02-18-2004, 08:45 AM
    bingo pajama
    the use of natural light in this shot does it for me. i especially like the light on the bookshelf. very nice. was this a handheld shot? what was the shutter speed?
  • 02-18-2004, 01:21 PM
    merckxman
    Ugh--I need to remember...

    I took this shot twice. Both were handheld using a Tokina 30-70/f2.8 lens--I braced myself up aginst a doorjamb. I'm pretty sure this is the shot where I spot metered on the table and opened up the aperture. I think the lens speed was 60 and the aperture was wide open at 2.8. I metered off the window on the other shot and the interior was a little underexposed and off color (a little green).

    Thanks for asking!
  • 02-18-2004, 06:17 PM
    PuckJunkey
    Very nice job of capturing "the mood" of the place. My only suggestion: I would rework the existing photo a bit more by using the Perspective Correction tools in Photoshop, in order to straighten out that cabinet a bit. You should be able to make it "stand up straight" without distorting its appearance too much. Otherwise, it's pretty much perfect for the goal you were describing.
  • 02-18-2004, 09:32 PM
    LLMc
    This is a really nice shot. I like the mood and the warm colors. I think it's a little soft, but that does add something to the mood, it's not too soft. I agree with the suggestion about using the perspective tool to straighten the cabinet. One other thing I maght try is cropping a little closer to the table on the right, maybe just inside the thing on the wall. Nice work!
  • 02-19-2004, 08:31 AM
    merckxman
    PuckJunkie:

    I've never heard of persective correction in Photoshop. I'll give it a whirl. As for the cabinet, I think it actually was leaning like that--the floor in the room is over 200 years old...:-)

    Thanks for the comments.
  • 02-19-2004, 08:37 AM
    merckxman
    Lou:

    I agree it's a little soft. That seems to have been an artifact of scanning, converting to jpg and reducing the size of the file. I use Paint Shop Pro for my photos, but I didn't really manipulate the picture at all for this forum. I just scanned it and converted it.

    Funny that you mentioned cropping the pic. I did exactly what you suggested when I printed it in 8x10 and framed it. Thanks for confirming my thoughts on the composition.
  • 02-19-2004, 09:48 AM
    PuckJunkey
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by merckxman
    PuckJunkie:

    I've never heard of persective correction in Photoshop. I'll give it a whirl. As for the cabinet, I think it actually was leaning like that--the floor in the room is over 200 years old...:-)


    *lol* Well, that's true isn't it? Hadn't thought of it that way. If it was as such, don't do a thing to it; it's perfect in that case. But in general, Edit | Transform | Perspective is one of my favorite tools in Photoshop. No architectural or interior photographer should "leave home without it".

    :D