I get comments

Duster (a non-registered user) left the following comment on my post "Mike's Digiscoping Secrets - Stitching!":
"It is great to use photoshop as a tool, but how good of digiscoper are you when you do that? The person that can get the great snap shot with no help from the computer is the better digiscoper."
I agree. And some days I'm a better digiscoper than others. However, the point of my article on stitching images was to offer a solution to Ryan's challenge that's unique to digiscoping: What can you do when you're so close to a bird that critical parts of it (like the face) are in the edge of the image where lens curvature causes loss of detail? Fortunately, for smaller songbirds this is rarely a problem, but to illustrate what I'm talking about I displayed a grid on my computer monitor (flatscreen) and digiscoped it:

Two things are revealed: a. The combination of my Nikon Coolpix 8400, Nikon UR-E14 accessory adapter and Swarovski DCA attached to my spotting scope's eyepiece is not perfectly on axis. b. You can see the edge curvature I'm referring to (I've lightened the area with the best uniform sharpness - a veritable "sweet spot"). Such tests will probably vary from one digiscoping configuration to the next, but there's almost always going to be some loss of image sharpness along the edge of the field.
When digiscoping a bird, I try to compose it so that most of it (or it's face) will fall into this sweet spot. With a larger bird that overlaps outside of the boundary of the sweet spot, you might have time to back away from it so that it falls within this zone. However, moving away from the bird will also result in some overall sharpness loss. So, returning to the point of stitching; by quickly taking two exposures of the bird, one of the face in the sweet spot, and one of the lower portion of the bird, you can have a resultant image (if you really want to take the time to use photoshop to stitch them together) that has uniform sharpness across the entire picture. How many photographs in my digiscoping gallery are stitched in this manner? Well, this technique will only work if you have a relatively stationary subject (that rarely ever happens to me!) I think I've employed this process for perhaps 3 or 4 images out of the several hundred on my website.
With digiscoping, there is a loss of contrast and shutter speeds are at a premium. Generally, I use exposure compensation to shoot at -1.0 to obtain a minimum of a 1/125th second shutter speed. This typically means I'll use photoshop to increase the brightness and contrast for nearly every image I shoot. For the past six years, I've been using one of the best spotting scopes on the market along with popular digital cameras for digiscoping and have taken several thousand images under the best lighting conditions. From experience, I can tell who is post-processing and who isn't and the fact is that most of the well-known digiscopers out there use photoshop to enhance their work. In my opinion, using photoshop doesn't take anything away from their talent.
Finally, there are many digiscopers who are better than I am, but I'm not in competition with them. The point isn't who's the best or worst but whether or not I'm having fun.
© Mike McDowell










8 Comments:
I think the snobbery will never end ... color film isn't "real" photography, digital isn't "real" photography, Photoshop makes you a cheater, etc. Rubbish!
You make great pictures.
Ansel Adams would have loved it - all of it!
Speaking of Ansel Adams I submit the following quote of his.....
“I had been able to realize a desired image: not the way the subject appeared in reality but how it felt to me and how it must appear in the finished print”.
Photography is an
Art....not a Science.
To each his/her own! :)
"Finally, there are many digiscopers who are better than I am, but I'm not in competition with them. The point isn't who's the best or worst but whether or not I'm having fun."
It's nice to hear some words of common sense out there. Looking at some of the digiscoping forums, there are too many people who take themselves way too seriously. Digiscoping (and birding) is only a hobby. While I take a lot of pride in some of pictures, what I do out in the field will have no bearing on my livelihood, my family, or other the lives of other people. Let's keep it all in perspective.
Knowing when and how best to use Photoshop is itself a bit of a skill (...and one that at some distant point most all photographers will utilize).
...I'm reminded of being in high school decades ago and an English teacher telling me I was a wonderful writer, to which I replied sheepishly that actually I had to use a thesaurus a lot to find the right words -- he responded that a thesaurus was a tool just as much as a pen was, and the fact that I knew when to use it and could select the best word choice from so many was nothing to feel guilty about, but only added to writing prowess. FWIW.
Mike--
Great post. But I have to disagree with one thing you said: "...there are many digiscopers who are better than I am." Not in my experience. Humility is great and all, but as a digiscoper, dude, you rock!
Even better, you're one of the only people really working to help others understand the process and improve their own images. And that includes Photoshop, for people who really want to get the most they can from their photography.
Thanks for sharing with all of us.
Best regards,
Jeff
I can't think of one magazine or periodical that doesn't manipulate an image with Photoshop, either to improve an image or to make someone look more flawed than they really are: If only that model were really that thin. If only her eyes were really that blue. There is no such thing as perfection in a photographic subject or Photoshop wouldn't have been invented. I use it everytime I work with digiscoped photos.
All,
Thank you for your support!
Mike
Post a Comment
<< Home