WDWFigment
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2007
- Messages
- 2,245
A bit too much HDR for my tastes, but you're right, wet ground looks better - note that in countless movies, the roads are wet down at night to give a darker, more reflective surface. I was happy that when I made a couple quick evening visits to NYC recently, it was drizzling slightly for just that reason.

Love it! How/when were you able to catch it with no one around? I keep pushing DH to do dining reservations at times that will put us in the parks either early (pre-open) or late )after closing.

Hmm, yeah upon a second look, it's definitely the contrast... the road looks really unreal, especially around the trolley tracks - it looks like it started to just "erase" the ground around the asphalt around the tracks. There's also the bright sidewalks and very dark trashcans. It's probably also the white balance; I go back and forth about how I prefer my night Main St shots but either way, you've got a pretty "golden" WB going here.![]()
Nice shot- the WB looks very warm but I know that's how it looks in real life. I tend to process it a little cooler than it actually is but that's just me.
OT: I never noticed how many trash cans there are on Main Street!

I never notice it in person, then I look at the shots and am amazed. As for white balance, I am surprised at how many times this has come up in the last couple of days, but I really don't attempt to process my images with the 'correct' white balance. I go for what looks best to my eye. Maybe that's just my lack of photographic knowledge, but I've always thought of WB as one of those things that should be manipulated as the photographer sees fit.![]()

Yeah, it does seem a little heavy on the sharpening too, probably drawing attention to the contrast, too.I definitely need to revisit that. Thank you for the suggestion. If you've got any other ideas, I'm all ears. I really labored over this shot for quite a while, because I couldn't get it how I wanted it to look. I think I over-sharpened it, too. Thanks for the help!
Also oceans, fountains, waterfalls, and gravy.MarkBarbieri said:Roads, flowers, and women all photograph better when wet.
Yeah, it does seem a little heavy on the sharpening too, probably drawing attention to the contrast, too.
As you using Lightroom/ACR or something else? Just as an alternative, I would maybe try bringing down the contrast and bringing up the blacks if your goal is too darken the blacks; this will leave the brighter colors mostly along. Or, use levels and bring down the shadows and maybe adjust the others a little. For coloration, maybe try bringing back the white balance a little and use Vibrance; this will give you somewhat different golden tones. Lastly, try using Clarity instead of Sharpness and maybe use a little more sparingly. Based on what it sounds like your goals are for the shot, I think those changes may work well for you.
Also oceans, fountains, waterfalls, and gravy.
And with Christmas decorations!
Well, Lightroom does have the history; you could always re-do what you did before it... or just copy down the non-default settings, duplicate the photo, and apply those settings. I find LR's ability to have duplicates of a single file is pretty handy sometimes when trying alternative ways of processing, and to be able to easily compare them side by side.I already brought up the blacks, clarity, and vibrance as well. I actually did some color correction that 'fixed' the sky making it so that the sky wasn't so warm (no clue why it just affected the sky, but it really worked well).
I wish I could just 'step backward' and undo the selective unsharp mask. I think that would really make it look better. I almost un-did it right after applying it because I didn't think it looked quite right, but it was a close call.
though the WDW one is low enough to get pretty good reflections anyway.