Photo processing adventures with a heffalump

The Matriarch: an African elephant at Masai Mara in Kenya.
I dropped a can of beans on my foot.

So I’ve mostly been confined to quarters. For me that means messing about with my computer and photographs. So this is not a story of great adventure in the wide world. I decided to try out some photo processing programs on an older, not so great photo from a safari in Africa several years ago.

Here goes:

Once upon a time, a not-so-little, not-so-young girl..okay it was really an old-enough-to-be-a-grandmother, mature (most of the time) woman…got to go on a once-in-a-lifetime safari in Africa. She bought a new camera for the trip, a Nikon L120, with a huge (to her) zoom of 21x…

So long ago in experience, if not so many years. I have this block of photos from that trip that I treasure because they bring back great memories. My beloved (and still functioning!) Nikon L120 point and shoot caught some really great pictures, and I eventually got LightRoom to clean them up a bit and have used them now and again in posts.

My long-ish tale of woe

I have moved up in cameras, taking baby steps along the way, I now use a Sony RX10iv, which has manual mode and shoots in RAW. This has changed my “flow” a bunch. My older version of LightRoom can’t read the Sony ARW files, so I have to convert them to DNG to use it. (Does anyone else think that paragraph reads like a bowl of alphabet soup? )

To upgrade LightRoom I would have to go to a subscription. A subscription won’t work for me. In addition to the cost, many places I go do not have reliable, or any, internet. So the easiest solution is out.

Working up options

LightRoom is both a photo management system and editing software. There are a lot of programs out there some open source (free) and some cost. Most don’t combine the photo management and the processing.

Seeking a new way I’ve tried several programs, both open source (free) and paid (only considering the modest cost ones). The system I am homing in on is a hybrid that uses a bit of all of them, depending on my mood and the photo.

With my foot elevated I decided to see what these programs can do with an older, not very high pixel count jpg from my trip to Africa.

On to my heffalump.

Straight out of the camera

The L120 does really well in circumstances where the light is good. But this photo, taken on a bright afternoon is a bit wonky. Here is the original, straight from the camera:

A so-so photo of a large female African elephant at Masai Mara in Kenya. I used this photo to experiment with several photo processing programs.
If you zoom in you can see that her skin is very grainy and mottled with weird color noise, also the background is pretty blown out, and there is a good bit of purple and green fringing.

Photo processing experiments

Adobe’s LightRoom 5

Here is what I did with it in Adobe LightRoom 5. I used the regular sliders some, but also used gradient filters: linear ones to bring down the brightness of the sky and a radial one to bring clarity and a little light onto her face.

A large, female African elephant standing in grassland at Masai Mara national park in Kenya. The older, low quality, jpg file was post processed using Adobe Lightroom 5.
The matriarch: if you zoom in you can see that the skin is much less mottled with color noise.

RAW Therapee

Raw Therapee is an open-source (free) program that is useful, to me, for two things:

  1. Viewing the photos so I can jot down the filename to import into Topaz Studio 2 or GIMP, since the Windows interface cannot read the photos it is a guessing game what will show up if you don’t preview.
  2. Applying camera and/or lens specific corrections before moving the file into Topaz Studio 2 or GIMP.

I thought I would take a look at what I can do with it to this old jpg file:

A large, female African elephant at Masai Mara game park in Kenya. The old jpg photo was processed, but not really improved, using RAW Therapee, a program built for using RAW files.
The elephant is okay but the background needs work.

To be fair: I am not adept with this program, since I usually only use it for a very few basic adjustments prior to using another program. It does not seem to have masking or the ability to apply corrections to just part of an image. Which this image really needs. RAW Therapee is also not designed to work on jpg files.

GIMP

GIMP (stands for Gnu Image Manipulation Program) is also open source (free). It is very powerful, especially with some of the plug-ins available. I’ve been messing about with it for a while now and am far from an expert. Here is what I was able to do with this photo in GIMP without fancy add-ons:

A large, female African elephant standing in grassland at Masai Mara national park in Kenya. The original low pixel count JPG file was post processed using GIMP's basic tools.
I had to de-saturate the elephant to get rid of the color noise, fortunately she looks good in gray.

Within GIMP there is a plug-in set called NIK. This is what I did using just NIK within GIMP.

Large, female African elephant at Masai Mara in Kenya. Original low quality JPG file was processed using the NIK collection inside of GIMP.
NIK did a good job of removing noise and keeping detail.

Luminar 3

In the “not free” category is Luminar 3. It had a lot of hype when it came out and I fell for it. With my old computer is was a dud. It really needs more than 8 gig of RAM. I was able to use Luminar Flex as a plug-in with Lightroom on my old machine, but that didn’t solve my need to become independent of LR. When I got a new computer, with 16 gig, it became usable and now I rather like it.

Here is what I did with the heffalump in Luminar 3:

A female African elephant at Masai Mara national park in Kenya. The original low pixel count, blurry and noisy photo was improved on in Luminar 3.

Topaz Studio 2

I impulsively got Topaz Studio 2 a few weeks ago, in large measure so I can play with some more artistic effects. Here is what the basic adjustment filters (with different settings applied to different areas of the photo) got me:

A large female African elephant at Masai Mara national park in Kenya. A small, fairly poor quality JPG photo processed with Topaz Studio 2.

Here she is with “Safari Afternoon” look applied (it seemed appropriate), everywhere except her face:

A large female African elephant at Masai Mara game park, processed with Topaz Studio 2, using the Safari Afternoon "look".

There isn’t a moral to this story.

Unless it is to be more careful when collecting together chili supplies.

Each photo processing program has quirks, strengths and weaknesses. As always, I feel like I need to go back and do more with all of them. This was a challenging photo because the different parts of the back ground needed different treatments and there was a lot of noise in the elephant’s skin.

Note: I originally wrote and posted this on XingfuMama.blog.