With the trusty D90, I used the arsenal of Nikkor lenses I had in my bag: 12-24mm, 18-105mm and the 70-300mm. By using the wide zoom range of these lenses, I was able to capture many different angles of the tulips which was even a bit of a surprise to me. The camera was set to AV mode and RAW along with a base ISO of 200. To control the depth of field and lighting, I did adjust the aperture and exposure composition if needed. The ‘crazy’ legged Gorilla tripod was used since I wanted to get different perspectives of the tulips which sometimes caused me to get completely flat on the ground so I was looking up with the camera.
I processed all of these images in ViewNX by changing the white balance, picture control and exposure if needed. The custom landscape-nature picture control curve I’ve created was used most and I even used the custom sunrise one I used last year for golf course images. I adjusted the sharpness from 1 to 3 on the slider since out of the camera, RAW doesn’t have any camera sharpening.
Putting the final touches on them was done in PSE8. With tulips cut off or unwanted objects in the background, the cloning and healing brush tool was used to fix these situations. To enhance some of the images, layer masks, guassian blur, smart brush tool and levels were used in some sort or fashion. As I have come to like, the Virtual Studio plug-in was used for black and white treatment. With the different layers and affects in these images, opacity was used to lower the percentage of these post processing techniques. EasyHDR was also used on the church image to try to capture the whole dynamic range of the scene.