Very little you can do now, there is nothing to do anything with.View attachment 407505
What can I do with this sky please and is the image over sharpened? I'm not quite sure what went wrong.
That should work OKThanks for the replies. I think I have some images where I exposed for the sky but they turned out too dark on the land. I might try and swap the sky into these, though i would need to learn how. I don't own any filters so that wasn't an option.
Lots to learn there. Thankyou.That should work OK
If you want to do that in future, set the camera to bracket the exposure, and set the exposure compensation to -2, then all the shots you need will be framed exactly the same, makes it easier to edit.
Or you could try an HDR merge from those shots, and lower the tone mapping right down.
Yes, they will do. You can raise the shadows in a simple photo editing program like Fastone. Even the native Windows app will do it for you. Most of the time that will work fine. I'm not familiar with your camera. But you can probably see the effect your changes are having in real time on the screen. Play around with it and you'll be amazed at the difference. Don't worry about the inbuilt meter. You can alter your exposure afterwards once you have uploaded it to your computer.Thanks for the replies. I think I have some images where I exposed for the sky but they turned out too dark on the land. I might try and swap the sky into these, though i would need to learn how. I don't own any filters so that wasn't an option.
I think that's pretty much it.Well a lot has been said about the sky, but I also think the foreground (the 2 large rocks) are not as sharp as they should be.
I think the camera has focused on the distant hillside and with a shallow depth of field, (large aperture), has left the foreground out of focus.