Yosemite Falls in Winter
Friday, September 1st, 2006I captured this photograph in early spring in Yosemite Valley and archived it. It was one of those situations when the light looked glorious when I took the photo in the late afternoon from the so-called Swinging Bridge, but the capture was disappointing on my first review. (I say “so-called” because, as Julian pointed out to me with sorrow, this bridge seems pretty fixed in place, and does not really swing.)
I use Adobe Bridge for my initial screening of images, and I capture both a RAW and a JPEG version of each image. Often, the JPEG gives me a better idea of what I’ve got than the RAW version before it has been processed. The capture itself of this image in both RAW and JPEG when I viewed it in on my computer was kind of blah. The highlights appeared washed out, and the shadow areas seemed dull.
I salvaged the photo, and created an image that was more like my experience of being there than the pre-processed capture, by using multiple RAW exposures: one for the highlights and clouds, one for the shadows, and one for the mid-tones, such as the cliff. I combined these different exposures as layers, and I added layer masks set to “Hide All,” filling the layer mask with black. I then used the Paintbrush tool to “paint in” the highlight and shadow areas I wanted with varying degress of opacity (using the middle exposure as my background layer).
This is my 600th post in my photo blog, which started life modestly as a support to my Digital Field Guide, but has taken on a life of its own. If you are new to my blog, you might want to take a look at the Photoshop Techniques, San Francisco, Yosemite, and Water Drops categories.

