The Food Photo Shutter Bug Club
#61
Posted 24 June 2004 - 09:05 AM
"Having spent most of my life searching for truth in the excitement of science, I am now in search of the perfectly seared foie gras without any sweet glop." Linda LaRose
#62
Posted 24 June 2004 - 09:12 AM
For the macro shots, I think I like the ribs the best, second picture. The shot does a great job of conveying the information about texture and structure of a good rib, which, I assume, is the intent rather than an artsy shot.
Is it a coincidence that my favorites are also the first two you selected?
"Having spent most of my life searching for truth in the excitement of science, I am now in search of the perfectly seared foie gras without any sweet glop." Linda LaRose
#63
Posted 24 June 2004 - 09:15 AM
So I think they deserve an analysis, of course (this hasn't been an appreciation thread as much as a "how can these shots be improved" topic), but we've got to keep in mind the differences between candid shots and posed ones. Ed Mitchell, for example, couldn't be moved one way or the other in that first shot, and even the camera angle could only have been changed slightly.
P.S. - I ate the sandwich Ed is making in that picture.
#64
Posted 24 June 2004 - 09:17 AM
I was looking at the source code, and "plungercam" came up. I Googled it and found out a little more. If you see the pictures with a very narrow in-focus area, I think it's that lens attachment creating the look.Wowser. That guy is good. One could learn a lot just by studying each picture. Especially his use of depth of field and lighting could translate quite well to food photography. What kind of lens? I couldn't find that information.
I used to know that photographer back in my Nashville years. I even modeled for him once.
He was always a deep and sensitive (and funny) person; the world he occupies now is just beyond my comprehension in terms of depth, subtlety, good humor, and oh, the eye. So much Southernness, too. (In a good way.)
I'm just floored. Talk about stuff that can't be taught. Studied, but not taught.
#65
Posted 24 June 2004 - 09:28 AM
What I failed to convey in my post is that the first shot is really really good given the candid shooting situation. The comment about the face lighting is just a minor technical note. (Besides, we can't let Jason get the big-head.Well, for one thing, they are candid, not posed shots. A different category altogether from most of the other shots discussed here.
Quite frankly, being an obviously candid shot, you could even say, "Look at what a great shot this is even though I couldn't control any of the conditions."
"Having spent most of my life searching for truth in the excitement of science, I am now in search of the perfectly seared foie gras without any sweet glop." Linda LaRose
#66
Posted 24 June 2004 - 09:45 AM
The problem, I suppose, was that Ed's hat is shading his face, and he's already got pretty dark skin. Part of the dangers of candid, I guess, is that Ed was actually working and wasn't exactly going to take that hat. I think there might have been a few other shots taken a second or two away in each direction, but I think the one we are seeing is the only one which wasn't blurry (Ed moves fast for such a big guy).
#67
Posted 24 June 2004 - 09:51 AM
Have you tried changing the metering option? Like when you take a photo of a tan person wearing a white t-shirt? My camera as a default averages out the light from all parts of the frame, so sometimes I have to switch it to spot metering. Apart from photographing in more ambient light, that might be worth a try.Great thread. I've been having more of a technical than asthetic problem with my pictures...
For the White Cake thread over on the Pastry & Baking forum, I've been attempting to take some very close pics of the various cakes to show their texture. However, since the cakes are so white, I've not been able to use the flash without gettting a huge, blurred mess. But not using the flash resulted in some loss of detail. Here is one of the no-flash pics that has been manipulated to increase the sharpness a bit and to brighten it up to real-life color.![]()
Any ideas to improve the detail? Maybe another light source?
Also, I initially photographed the cakes on a dark-colored plate, but there was far too much constrast for my little Canon PowerShot S110 and the cake was a total white blob.
I did have a bit better luck with the darker banana cakes when I could use the flash...
One of my all-time favorite cartoons!To me, this is "BLAH BLAH BLAH Ginger" (for those who know the old cartoon about "what dogs hear").
#68
Posted 24 June 2004 - 10:12 AM
"Having spent most of my life searching for truth in the excitement of science, I am now in search of the perfectly seared foie gras without any sweet glop." Linda LaRose
#69
Posted 24 June 2004 - 10:16 AM

It is not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost,
but the urge to serve others at whatever cost. -Arthur Ashe
#70
Posted 24 June 2004 - 10:51 AM
Thanks for posting this site. His work is gorgeous. It looks like he did some post-production work (dodging & burning) on some of his pics. And his "one part in focus and the rest out of focus" lens (don't know the technical name for it) is put to good use.
Extraordinary images!
As for Jason's pics....
Overall, they are just beautiful, especially after hearing they were just candid snapshots. You have a good eye for composition.
I was puzzled to hear some image processing was done on them since I'd suggest a little more contrast on a number of them. After bringing out the contrast, they really pop. I ran them through my Photoshop 7's AutoContrast mode and they just came to life.
Your "beans" photo is superb and nothing needs to be done with it. It shows great depth of field, great texture and lighting. It should be a book cover photo. Well done.
A couple photos have a slight yellow tinge to them which was most likely caused by the overhead awning which changed the color of the natural light. Using Photoshop's Color Balance image tool would color-correct the photo and bring more pinkness/redness back into the meat.
You did very well on Ed's pic. It tells a story and the busy background is far away enough to be slightly out of focus allowing Ed to stand out even more. I completely understand your post-production struggle to balance this picture's light tones when compared against the darker tones of Ed's skin. This is an example of where Photoshop's Auto features (Auto Contrast, Auto Levels, Auto Color) fail to work as well as they should. Thanks to your tweaking, his face is lit enough so that we are able to see deatils & texture. You could try using the Dodging/Burning Tools to try and bring out more of his features, though I usually don't have much luck with them. I use another trick which involves a couple layers and a Layer Mask. It's rather lengthy to explain and is probably off-topic for this current thread unless you request otherwise.
I won't post the pics after my Photoshop adjustments to try and keep bandwidth down but will if anyone insists.
They are all very good pictures and with a few "tweaks" could be sold as artwork, IMHO. I can just picture them on the walls of a BBQ joint.
edited to remove extraneous letterss
Edited by Toliver, 24 June 2004 - 10:52 AM.
“Peter: Oh my god, Brian, there's a message in my Alphabits. It says, 'Oooooo.'
Brian: Peter, those are Cheerios.”
– From Fox TV’s “Family Guy”
#71
Posted 24 June 2004 - 11:06 AM
I frequently find it boring (even annoying) when people take these "flat" looking shots where there are no apparent differences in focus. So I like your shot, at the very least as an experiment.Here are a couple of mine (to get started with). I tend to do shots with unusual centers of focus (as with the frozen berry shot) and I am not sure if they work.
To me, the only thing which disturbs it is that one branch that reaches up right under that berry with the yellow bit on it. I don't know... in a "natural" environment is it okay to do something like reach out and break a twig off, or does the photographer have to be totally passive?
Ed's photo was, I think, the only one to have anything extensive done on it. I myself, after Jason left, managed to make one where there was a pretty interesting play between light and dark, but it started to look "artistic" and not natural.I was puzzled to hear some image processing was done on them
#72
Posted 24 June 2004 - 11:14 AM
I totally think it's okay to art-direct Mother Nature.I don't know... in a "natural" environment is it okay to do something like reach out and break a twig off, or does the photographer have to be totally passive?
Because if you're seeing what I'm seeing, it's like a ghostly finger is reaching up for the berry. Your eye can't help but go there.
I took some fantastic shots of Bob's grandson on Father's Day: a baby in the grass with a pile of four kittens. Using the burst mode on the camera was great, but only later did I realize a big blade of grass was sticking up in his face. A distraction, to be sure.
Darn it!
I saw, "Mow down those distractions."
#73
Posted 24 June 2004 - 11:16 AM
Co-Founder, The Society for Culinary Arts & Letters
offthebroiler.com - Food Blog | My Flickr photo stream
#74
Posted 24 June 2004 - 12:53 PM
I had to crop it (because Jason cheated and didn't use imageGullet for the original photo--which is a bit too "long" for what iG allows), but here's the pic. of Ed where I upped the contrast on purpose. Is it better because it brings out those shadows on his face, or worse because it looks more like a still frame from an independant film rather than real life? You decide...Actually Toliver, if you want to post the altered versions of my pics, please do.
#75
Posted 24 June 2004 - 01:16 PM
I reserve the right to change my mind and hereby retract my comment about the darkness of the face.
"Having spent most of my life searching for truth in the excitement of science, I am now in search of the perfectly seared foie gras without any sweet glop." Linda LaRose
#76
Posted 24 June 2004 - 01:24 PM
I uploaded mine to PictureTrail and posted from there. I'm not too happy since it looks like the pictures lost something in the translation but they get the point across (I also made them a wee bit smaller in size).
Photoshop's Auto Contrast helped remove the faint "whitewash" of the images.
Here's my side by side of Ed's picture with the original next to my tweak. I did my Layer Mask trick and also gave the background a slight blurry quality to make Ed stand out more. The difference is subtle but his face is brought out more.

This is Auto Contrast, with a little more added, plus a bit of the Unsharp Mask filter to make it pop a little.

Just Auto Contrast

Auto Contrast with a little Unsharp Mask filter to make it pop

Auto Contrast with a little Unsharp Mask filter

Auto Contrast with a little Unsharp Mask filter

Auto Contrast with a little Unsharp Mask filter

Auto Contrast, Color Balance Adjustment, and a little Unsharp Mask filter

Color Balance Adjustment and a little Unsharp Mask filter

Auto Contrast with a little Unsharp Mask filter

And I did nothing to the bean picture because it needed no tweaking...great as is.
Also, I tried to keep all of these images around 100k so they would load a little easier. That may have added a little "graininess" to the images but that's the nature of the compressed beastie.
Edited by Toliver, 24 June 2004 - 01:27 PM.
“Peter: Oh my god, Brian, there's a message in my Alphabits. It says, 'Oooooo.'
Brian: Peter, those are Cheerios.”
– From Fox TV’s “Family Guy”
#77
Posted 24 June 2004 - 01:30 PM
The pulled pork pile picture (wow that's a lot of Ps) is the only one I originally looked at, other than the beans, that I didn't think needed any changes. But Jason was only here for a few minutes, and we spent most of them applying and unapplying various filters on Ed's picture and hating them all.
#78
Posted 24 June 2004 - 02:34 PM
I thought the pulled pork pile picture (with the checked tablecloth in the background) was too yellow because of the light filtered through the awning. I thought swinging it more towards red made it look a little bit more appetizing.You should PM Jason. He might want to change out your tweaked versions for those he has posted in the BABBP topic, without the size reductions I mean.
The pulled pork pile picture (wow that's a lot of Ps) is the only one I originally looked at, other than the beans, that I didn't think needed any changes. But Jason was only here for a few minutes, and we spent most of them applying and unapplying various filters on Ed's picture and hating them all.
The problem in Photoshop with using Auto Contrast or even just the Brightness/Contrast Adjustment tools is that (I think) the choices the program makes when making the adjustments are based upon finding the extremes (the brightest white and the darkest black) and figuring the proper levels for everything in between based on those two parameters.
So if you have someone like Ed over a bright background, any fiddling with the contrast to bring out his dark skin tones and texture will begin washing out everything that's brighter (as you found out).
I end up "fooling" the program by duplicating the original layer and then adjusting the brightness/contrast for the image, concentrating on the area that needs tweaking (Ed's face, in this case) and ignoring how everything else looks. I then add a Layer Mask to the tweaked layer. I fill it 100% black which makes it disappear completely. Then I use the Airbrush Tool on the Layer Mask using 100% white and airbrush his face, making his face on the lighter tweaked layer appear. So in effect, you have the original image underneath with just his face as part of another brighter layer on top of it.
I'll be happy to email him my full-sized tweaking of his images if he wants them.
“Peter: Oh my god, Brian, there's a message in my Alphabits. It says, 'Oooooo.'
Brian: Peter, those are Cheerios.”
– From Fox TV’s “Family Guy”
#79
Posted 24 June 2004 - 03:11 PM
That is an impressive difference, and it is making me very hungry.You should PM Jason. He might want to change out your tweaked versions for those he has posted in the BABBP topic, without the size reductions I mean.
The pulled pork pile picture (wow that's a lot of Ps) is the only one I originally looked at, other than the beans, that I didn't think needed any changes. But Jason was only here for a few minutes, and we spent most of them applying and unapplying various filters on Ed's picture and hating them all.
Lots of digital cameras now have those functions built in. I was going to post a pair of photos I took last week of some lettuce & nasturtium salad, one with "vivid" setting, one without. In the default photo the lettuce looked kind of grayish blah, but with the boost in color it looked beautiful. On my screen the difference was really impressive, but once I shrunk the photos down to gullet-size it was not as obvious. (The default just looks a little darker). Worth playing with those features though...
#80
Posted 24 June 2004 - 03:29 PM
I also really fell for those frozen cherries. I love the unique composition and the woodsy natural browns with the hot red-orange of the cherries.
Maybe we could do a (weekly? or monthly?) thing where someone picks a single food, ingredient, or theme to shoot and everyone posts their shots (cherries, BBQ, ice cream, etc) -- we can compare and talk about all the different approaches (what works, what doesn't) and tackle any technical problems we run into. Maybe a separate thread? Just a thought -- there's nothing like a narrow assignment to get people thinking about everyday things in extraordinary ways.
#81
Posted 24 June 2004 - 03:36 PM
I'd like something a little more focused. I think its a good suggestion!Those BBQ pictures are great!....the touch of extra contrast really helped them pop as well. Nice.
I also really fell for those frozen cherries. I love the unique composition and the woodsy natural browns with the hot red-orange of the cherries.
Maybe we could do a (weekly? or monthly?) thing where someone picks a single food, ingredient, or theme to shoot and everyone posts their shots (cherries, BBQ, ice cream, etc) -- we can compare and talk about all the different approaches (what works, what doesn't) and tackle any technical problems we run into. Maybe a separate thread? Just a thought -- there's nothing like a narrow assignment to get people thinking about everyday things in extraordinary ways.
#82
Posted 24 June 2004 - 05:42 PM
Personally, I wouldn't use any in-camera settings/functions. I prefer to import the photo into a program like Photoshop and do the tweaking there. I have more control there, plus it's at a much larger size so I can really see the details.Lots of digital cameras now have those functions built in.
But, if you don't have access to a program like that, I guess having it in the camera is better than nothing at all.
So, size does matter....once I shrunk the photos down to gullet-size it was not as obvious. (The default just looks a little darker).
Another thing I thought of is the Gamma setting on everyone's monitors will make a difference on perception. Everyone will see something different...in the original picture, some won't be able to make out Ed's face at all, some will see it perfectly. I surf eGullet using my calibrated monitor here at work so I saw a lot more than I would have on my consumer grade monitor at home.
I guess you just have to aim for the middle ground and hope for the best.
edited to add yet even more verbosity
Edited by Toliver, 24 June 2004 - 05:45 PM.
“Peter: Oh my god, Brian, there's a message in my Alphabits. It says, 'Oooooo.'
Brian: Peter, those are Cheerios.”
– From Fox TV’s “Family Guy”
#83
Posted 24 June 2004 - 06:12 PM

Chicken Mole Poblano, with Mexican rice and Refried Black Beans

Extreme black beans cloeseup
Co-Founder, The Society for Culinary Arts & Letters
offthebroiler.com - Food Blog | My Flickr photo stream
#84
Posted 24 June 2004 - 06:17 PM
Aside from that...I'm starving and that meal looks mighty good!
#85
Posted 24 June 2004 - 06:22 PM
I can understand a certain kind of art; say you're so close to a strawberry that there are only seeds and red and the shiny, dimpled flesh. That could be pretty, in an abstract but still recognizable way.
But beans? Mooshy beans?
I like the sesame seeds, though I can't exactly tell what they're on top of. At least they're distinct.
#86
Posted 24 June 2004 - 06:41 PM

I decided to crop it because I didnt like the way the white of the plate was showing up.
Tough crowd. No more pics for you!
Co-Founder, The Society for Culinary Arts & Letters
offthebroiler.com - Food Blog | My Flickr photo stream
#87
Posted 24 June 2004 - 06:43 PM
I think the question is whether or not it's a texture we actually want to see close up.
As for the focus, it's mostly an issue with the beans because I don't think there was a distinct element to focus ON.
The Mole Poblano? I think a straight shot from above might have worked, perhaps back enough to see the plate in the frame, but not beyond it.
EDIT - Okay, uncropped that was almost what you did, but from an angle I don't think was right. As for the plate? Maybe a different color plate? Black perhaps?
Edited by jhlurie, 24 June 2004 - 06:44 PM.
#88
Posted 24 June 2004 - 06:46 PM
I think they look cool. You suck.The extreme close-up works for some foods and not others. For Black Beans... no. For the BBQ Beans in the previous series... yes. Ditto for the miscellaneous pulled pork pictures.
I think the question is whether or not it's a texture we actually want to see close up.
Okay Lurie, YOU get yourself a digital cam and start taking pics...
Co-Founder, The Society for Culinary Arts & Letters
offthebroiler.com - Food Blog | My Flickr photo stream
#89
Posted 24 June 2004 - 07:00 PM
The non-closeup of the Mexican meal is better than the extreme-close-up, it just could be even better yet the next time. Part of the problem, may in fact not even be how the picture was taken but the subject. Can you take a good picture of beans like that? I'm not sure it's possible.
Perhaps that can be a future eG photo challenge, if we hold contests (and maybe we should).
#90
Posted 24 June 2004 - 07:12 PM
I like playing with different centers of focus. With the clarity of pictures today you can really play tricks with the eye.I frequently find it boring (even annoying) when people take these "flat" looking shots where there are no apparent differences in focus. So I like your shot, at the very least as an experiment.
To me, the only thing which disturbs it is that one branch that reaches up right under that berry with the yellow bit on it. I don't know... in a "natural" environment is it okay to do something like reach out and break a twig off, or does the photographer have to be totally passive?
Because if you're seeing what I'm seeing, it's like a ghostly finger is reaching up for the berry. Your eye can't help but go there.
I wish I could say that was on purpose, but I'm not that good

Same shot with different cropping

It is not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost,
but the urge to serve others at whatever cost. -Arthur Ashe









