Post processing for Instagram

A few people have been asking me what filters and tweaks I use before I post photographs to Instagram. Some people have also suggested that using any kind of post processing is "cheating" which I found surprising as I was not aware that art had any rules.  As I am a bit of a rebel I am ok with breaking the rules ;-)

The application, Instagram, comes with several pre-made filters that can be applied as well as tools that allow you to adjust your photograph.  As powerful as these tools are, for less than the price of a latte you can have a very powerful photo editor on your iPhone: Snapseed (Apple app store download).  The latest version of Snapseed allows the user to make non-destructive edits to photographs.

As you can see from the example below, several changes have been made from the original image on the left.  Snapseed allowed me to take away the shadow that was 'hiding' the buildings and to highlight the trees and water in the foreground.  It also allowed me to add more intensity to the color in the sky. The final version that was posted to Instagram can be seen here.

 

Similarly, in the images below I decreased the shadow in the buildings, increased the structure and sharpness of the photograph and made the sky 'pop'.

 

It is worth noting that both these original photographs were taken using the iPhone's HDR mode which takes two photographs, one underexposed and one overexposed. The photo application then merges the highlights and lowlights of the two photographs to create one balanced photograph.

The Hague

I have been choosing to take alternative routes through The Hague when I am out walking to see if I can see other views of buildings or scenes that I may have overlooked before.  This was captured on my iPhone on the way home a few evenings ago.

Taken where Korte Voorhout meets Koningskade.

Taken where Korte Voorhout meets Koningskade.

Falkirk Wheel

The Falkirk Wheel is a rotating boat lift near Bonnybridge in Scotland which connects the Forth and Clyde Canal to the Union Canal. It opened in 1992 and is the only rotating boat lift of it's kind in the world.

Needless to say I have visited this landmark several times since it has opened, primarily to take photographs. I have never been that satisfied with the photographs that I have taken.  I usually blame the weather, however, I was pleased with the shot below.

Falkirk Wheel at Sunset - Flickr

During my last trip back to Scotland I wasn't very happy about the amount of time I dedicated to taking photographs and only really went to two locations, The Falkirk Wheel and The Kelpies at the Helix Project.  From over two hundred shots I was only really happy with one or two. Only getting a couple of decent shots taught me the importance of regularly going out to take photographs. Hopefully I can rectify this in the coming months.

Scotland

It's been some time since I have visited home and I am looking forward to spending some quality time with my camera and the countryside.  With a little prayer and some luck I am hoping for dry weather.  The last time I visited Glencoe I was not so fortunate, although I still remember the good soup and pot of tea I had at the Glencoe Ski Center which warmed my spirit if not the weather.

Visiting Scotland is always bittersweet for me as I am reminded of what I am missing by living in the flattest country in the world. I am reminded of how green, wet and sweet smelling the countryside of my birth is.

Much has changed politically since my last visit, the independence argument seems to have been re-energised since the NO vote won, I thought the argument may be laid to rest after September but the YES campaign is picking up steam. I look forward to getting a sense of people's feelings about this sensitive political situation when I am home.