by Kleen Harry » Mon Jul 30, 2007 9:46 pm
Hi, Chris! Thanks a lot, M8! Very kind of you! :)
Considering how new you are to this editing business it's really outstandingly good work, M8! The image as a whole is quite good, IMHO. You really have an intuitive sense for what makes a good, interesting image. ;)
It's a bit rough, as we knew it would be at a larger size. That's no surprise. We wanted that so we could better see where things could be polished up a bit. :)
Please permit me to offer a couple of suggestions for your consideration, Chris:
1) Choose a high quality background image. When you start out with one this rough it's almost impossible to smooth it out and still have it look good. A better quality background image would, IMHO, offer an immediate, 100% improvement to this image. Not a very "hi tech" suggestion, is it! However, it is one of the basic things that we all learn somewhere along the way! ;)
2) If you get a background which is a little rough, you may be able to fix it with one of the various types of blurs the editor offers. I don't know if you editor has "Gaussian Blur" but that can work quite well on the rough areas in low doses. Too much and you'll quickly see what happens, hee, hee! ;D
3) If you have work to do on the background, do it first. You can also do it later as long as it is still on a separate layer. Once you've merged or flattened things, it's a lot harder to work with. This also gives you the opportunity to see if you can bring the background around to an acceptable level before you invest a lot of time and effort in it.
I think that's enough from me for now, hee, hee! What I'm trying to do is to focus in on what appears to be the biggest single thing rather than throwing a bunch of stuff at you all at once. We'll get around to the other stuff as time goes by. No rush. 8-)
So, just keep makin 'em and postin 'em. You might consider the idea of setting a goal for yourself in your next one to start out with a background image which looks good at 800 pixels wide. Don't forget that you can always crop a piece out of a much larger image. I do that more often than not and most of the guys I know who do composites do that as well.
Keep up the good work! You're on a roll!
Tallyho!
Don