I'd be hard pressed to call Mavic's camera "decent". I do use lightroom, but try not to be overly aggressive with it. Can't say i am any professional with it, though. Here is an example of "before and after" (before - is from dng preview, after - after me pulling some lightroom sliders, which is kinda... cheating).Mavic Camera is decent but if you use lightroom, u can improve the puc quality immensly.
Oo thats a nice picI'd be hard pressed to call Mavic's camera "decent". I do use lightroom, but try not to be overly aggressive with it. Can't say i am any professional with it, though. Here is an example of "before and after" (before - is from dng preview, after - after me pulling some lightroom sliders, which is kinda... cheating).
Thanks. Red rock canyon area, near Las Vegas.Oo thats a nice pic
Hey, i am by no mean not complaining about the sun flare, this pic isn't an example on anything i complain about, its just an example of what i do with LR (just to show that i am not overly aggressive with it at all).Nice pic [emoji106]At that angle, with the sun being where it is, even DSLR's without a sun shade/hood will have sun flare. As an example, I use pro level DSLR's & filter kits, yet still get sun flare on occasion. The camera on the mavic is no pro level DSLR, but still good enough for taking aerial shots in the right conditions. Most photographers wouldn't take shots in harsh light, and your pic at the Canyon is still usable with good detail. I'm happy with the Mavic's cam, and only advice I'd give anyone who wants to use it during the day in bright sun is use an NDPL (we photographers do with OUR DSLR's - so why is this any different) and consider the angle you want to shoot on relative to the sun - ie: away from the sun. Cheers.
It's not cheating, it's called digital post-processing and it should be done with any photograph, whether it's taken with a Mavic or a DSLR.Here is an example of "before and after" (before - is from dng preview, after - after me pulling some lightroom sliders, which is kinda... cheating).
I know what it is, and its a good question when does it become cheating. Sure, recovering some highlights and pulling up some shadows sounds benign, while, lets say, replacing the entire sky is definitely cheating (can you do that in LR? Not sure, but easy enough in PS). Now, while i dont do that, what about stuff in between, such as applying exposure gradient (which i often do on Mavic pics) to darken the sky a bit?It's not cheating, it's called digital post-processing and it should be done with any photograph, whether it's taken with a Mavic or a DSLR.
Oh well, come over here, and bring an inspire 2 with you, along with the best camera you can get for it. I'll be happy to try flying it and work on it's pics to compare the resultsI watched this topic with interest, but just for the sake of the comparison, how much better would it be with the inspire 2 ?
I've been a photographer for 40 years or so. None of this is unique to digital photography. With film it was common to dodge and burn areas of an image while printing it to even out exposure differences and to get the sky to look the way you wanted it to. We'd use filters to shift or correct colors, gradient filters on the sky, you name it.I know what it is, and its a good question when does it become cheating. Sure, recovering some highlights and pulling up some shadows sounds benign, while, lets say, replacing the entire sky is definitely cheating (can you do that in LR? Not sure, but easy enough in PS). Now, while i dont do that, what about stuff in between, such as applying exposure gradient (which i often do on Mavic pics) to darken the sky a bit?
Oh well, come over here, and bring an inspire 2 with you, along with the best camera you can get for it. I'll be happy to try flying it and work on it's pics to compare the results
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