Thanks @afre, the location is the cover pic of Ordnance Survey 1:50,000 map of Loch Tay & Glen Dochart, so quite a well known location, although call it the “Packhorse Bridge”. Might be worth a visit again in the autumn, with golden trees on the leaves, and hopefully more water in the falls.
@msd, looks like I’ll need to experiment with the tone curves & masks in darktable, rather than say exporting to gimp, doing dodging & burning there, and then reimporting back into darktable. As you say more control that way, plus it’s non destructive.
Certainly lots for me to have a play with when I have another go at editing the image Might end up using the final version for a submission to my local photographic associations monthly competitions.
Ouh, the initial pix was already quite good. I like your contrasty colors a lot though. However, I believe that images goes very well with 6x7 type crop.
In the G’MIC I used specific saturisation filter to increase colour contrast.
In the GIMP itself I mainly used dodge and burn to accentuate some picture elements. At the end I added a subtle Orton effect to give the whole scene a soft look.
@msd, I mean that I tend to export from darktable to gimp, then do dodging and burning in there, then reimport back into darktable. So I think I’ll try and get familiar with the tone curves in Darktable using masks
@sls141, I’ve had a look at your darktable xmp file, interesting use of the soften filter with parametric mask to smooth the water a little more Lovely images.
@Brian_Innes I missed this very nice shot of yours when it was initially posted, fortunately the thread has been re-bumped by @Kasyap.Sankara!
For me this image calls for a B&W rendering. I have tried to highlight the two main subjects in the scene, namely the bridge and the river, using several different curves applied locally (sort of dodge&burn technique, but with curves and layer masks).