Sunday, February 24, 2013

Sleek, Sexy, Shiny Lines: Counts Car Show 2013

Sleek, shiny, and sexy lines... What else do you look for when a car show like this comes to town.  I love the sleek look of a car, the shiny lights bouncing off a perfectly waxed body, and those sexy lines looking like a voluptuous woman lying on the beach.  Oh, yeah, we are talking about a car show, right?!  When the Counts of the Cobblestone's Car Club Annual Car Show comes to the Civic Center in Rapid City each spring, it's a sure sign that the cars are about to hit the streets again.

Let's take a drool together...I mean a stroll.  We hope you enjoy...

Corvette Counts of the Cobblestone's Annual Car Show Rapid City SD photos by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.dakotavisions.com

1959 Corvette Counts of the Cobblestone's Annual Car Show Rapid City SD photos by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.dakotavisions.com

1947 Continental Counts of the Cobblestone's Annual Car Show Rapid City SD photos by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.dakotavisions.com

1947 Continental Counts of the Cobblestone's Annual Car Show Rapid City SD photos by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.dakotavisions.com

Ford Delivery Van Counts of the Cobblestone's Annual Car Show Rapid City SD photos by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.dakotavisions.com

1959 Corvette Counts of the Cobblestone's Annual Car Show Rapid City SD photos by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.dakotavisions.com

Camaro Counts of the Cobblestone's Annual Car Show Rapid City SD photos by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.dakotavisions.com

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Counts Car Show in Rapid City, SD: Teaser

Sometimes there is a car so iconic, that just the hood ornament is enough to know what you are looking at.  We had a little fun at the Counts Car Show in Rapid City, SD this weekend, and took the macro lens out.  Just a teaser - more to come...

Counts Car Show in Rapid City, SD - Corvette hood emblem

Don't forget to join us on Facebook, Pinterest, Google+ , Twitter, or sneak a peek at our photography on Dakota Visions Photography, LLC. Until next time, we'll see you behind the lens...

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Badger Clark, Jr: The Cowboy Poet

Charles Badger Clark, Jr., was the youngest son of a popular Methodist minister who inherited the rich speaking voice of his father but not the piety. During his lifetime he achieved a degree of recognition as a western poet and earned the title of South Dakota's first poet laureate in 1937 by then governor, Leslie Jensen. Because he never flaunted his fame, he was largely unknown outside of his home state. The fact that his best-known poem, 'A Cowboy's Prayer' was widely reprinted under the 'Author Unknown' surname, contributed greatly to his anonymity. So in honor of South Dakotan's Poet Laureate, here is one of his poems set to photographs.

The Coyote

Trailing the last gleam after,
 In the valleys emptied of light,
 Ripples a whimsical laughter
 Under the wings of the night.
 Mocking the faded west airily,
 Meeting the little bats merrily,
 Over the mesas it shrills
 To the red moon on the hills.
Badger Clark Jr The Coyote accompanied with photographs by Dakota Visions Photography LLC
Mournfully rising and waning,
 Far through the moon-silvered land
 Wails a weird voice of complaining
 Over the thorns and the sand.
 Out of blue silences eerily.
 On to the black mountains wearily,
 Till the dim desert is crossed,
 Wanders the cry, and is lost.
Badger Clark Jr The Coyote accompanied with photographs by Dakota Visions Photography LLC
Here by the fire's ruddy streamers,
 Tired with our hopes and our fears,
 We inarticulate dreamers
 Hark to the song of our years.
 Up to the brooding divinity
 Far in that sparkling infinity
 Cry our despair and delight,
 Voice of the Western night!
By Charles Badger Clark, Jr

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Monday, February 11, 2013

The 300 Look: A Lightroom Tutorial

The movie, '300'...it had a look.  We've seen the movie, we've seen it imitated in posts on Facebook, Google+ and Pinterest - but how the heck do they do it?  The easy answer, well, you can find a preset for that, but we don't like that answer.  The more you learn about the development module panels, the better you will become as a post-processing guru! 

Note:  We would like to make a note that not all photographs look good with this high-contrast, desaturated style.  It looks great on photographs with lots of detail and texture including city shots, some landscapes, industrial decay, and even people (especially guys and extremely effective with a five o'clock shadow or facial hair).

Objective: 

This will be a beginner's tutorial using Lightroom 4 to achieve the '300' movie look on a portrait to create a photo like what is found below.

300 Look: A Lightroom Tutorial by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.seeyoubehindthelens.com

The '300' Look: A Lightroom 4 Tutorial

Import your photograph into Lightroom 4 using your normal workflow to begin this tutorial.


1.  Let's begin with exposure in the Development Module in the Basic panel.  Move your exposure to at least 0.50 or higher.  In this particular photograph, we choose 0.83.

Basic Panel in The 300 Look: A Lightroom 4 Tutorial by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.seeyoubehindthelens.com
2.  Continue working through the sliders in the Basic panel.  Our settings for this particular photograph are shown to the right, but you should get the main idea of what will help with your settings for your particular shot.  Pushing the Clarity slider to the extreme will help us add "punch" to this photo.

3.  The Tone Curve should be set between the Medium and Strong Contrast settings.  If you are comfortable with adjusting the tone curve yourself, a custom setting is the best here.
HSL Panel in The 300 Look: A Lightroom 4 Tutorial by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.seeyoubehindthelens.com
4.  For the HSL (Hue, Saturation, Luminance) / Color / B&W Panel we will focus solely on the Saturation portion.  As noted in our settings for this photograph, the main goal here is to desaturate the photograph.  Note our settings to the right. 

5.  Continue on to the Detail Panel in the Development Module.  We are going to sharpen the photograph to the extreme - but the important parts are the radius, detail, and masking settings.  Note ours below:

Detail or Sharpening Settings in Lightroom for the 300 Look Tutorial by Dakota Visions Photography LLC www.seeyoubehindthelens.com

These should be the main settings to get you on your way to establishing a great '300' sytle photograph.  Note:  We post-processed in Adobe Photoshop using the magic wand to capture our model on and place on a black background layer.  Some darkening was done around the edges of the head plus placing a grunge texture in a light layer for additional effect.  No additional HSL or sharpening work was done in Photoshop.

We hope this gets you started on creating some of your own great looking 300-like portraits.  Presets can be your friend, but you really begin to learn how different development module panel features work within Lightroom to open the world of post-processing up.  Now..."Give thanks, men, to Leonidas and the brave 300! TO VICTORY!"

Don't forget to join us on Facebook, Pinterest, Google+ , Twitter, or sneak a peek at our photography on Dakota Visions Photography, LLC. Until next time, we'll see you behind the lens...

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