Since at this point I only have a couple of ND grads (Neutral Density graduated), namely the 0.9 hard, and 0.6 soft, the choice here was simple. With a clear line dividing the sky from the ground, the hard grad was the initial choice. The bright cloudy sky was just about 4 stops brighter than the river, which makes the 0.9 also the best choice. With the ND grad in place, I took a few more shots to evaluate its positioning and overall exposure, before I got the BigStopper out.
Placing the BigStopper in front my lens drops the exposure by 10 stops, which my camera meter was able to tell me would be 15s @ f/11, which I used as the starting point for the final exposure value. Dialling those values in manual mode, and reviewing the test shot it looked like a good image. But looking into the histogram, there still was more information I could get in the photo, so I pushed the exposure up until the highlights began to clip. This got me to the photo final exposure of 25s,and a very smooth water texture but still not enough to blur the clouds.
Post processing here was actually very simple. Like normal I start off in Lightroom to get as much information as possible from the RAW file, by flattening the whites and blacks a small amount, and since the BigStopper leaves a light cool color cast, also warm-up the image using the White-Balance slider. Although the end result was a black and white photo, I always start with a flat and calibrated color image.
In this image, I thought that the color didn't add anything interesting to the mix, and by making it Black & White it would accentuate the graphical nature of the few elements present in the foreground. With the bold clouds in the sky as a source of drama to offset the stillness of the water. The conversion was made in Lightroom also, using it's inbuilt Black & White Mix tool to darken the blue in the skies and lighten the greens of the trees on the other side of the river.
I also applied the same settings to another image I had taken which featured a fast boat streaking through the river, so that both images could be transferred as layers into Photoshop.
Inside Photoshop, I added the streaking boat and water trail to my main image, before starting the final touch ups. Since this would be a small detail on the end image, I thought that it would not be distracting to add it, and would offer some interest when the viewer looked more intently at the finished image. Next I used the Orton effect to add a bit of a glow effect to water, and used Nik Silver Efex Pro to add more drama to the sky.
That is the whole story of this image, which actually took longer to write than it took to actually take the image and process it, but might be due to my very slow writing!
Hope this was of some value to any readers, and for now I'll stop with these very long posts. Any comments and questions are welcomed, and I'll do my best to get back to you promptly.
APN
-- Gear
Fujifilm X-PRO1
Fujifilm XF 18mmF2 R
GorillaPod Focus tripod
Filters : Lee Seven5 Big Stopper + 0.9 hard ND
-- Post
Lightroom : Initial tone and final crop.
Photoshop: Clean up and sharpening.
NikCollection Silver Efex Pro : Toning and Detail extraction.