Yapster
Senior Member
Yapster, i am using Aperture 3 with CS4 btw.. And i am aware of the high dynamic range FX have to offer..
But i used any sort of fill light technique in post, mostly is straight out of the cam, i only make the WB warmer.. Applied GND and spot through the clear portion of the GND..
Thanks for sharing your post processing workflow.. loss for words..haha.
Its very very informative and guess i still have a long way to go to attain that kinda level u n nightmare had attained
Thks alot for taking your precious time off in writing the above..i hope to improve more~! And shoot with u oneday~!!
Oh... I have no experience with Aperture and CS4 (was on CS2 and changed to CS3 recently due to change of platform). That's why i said "i guess".

There are many tweaking/setting that may affect that halo unnatural look.
If it is straight out of cam, and based on what you mentioned, then maybe this is what happen.
Your spot meter for the foreground and if i am not wrong, overexpose already (with reference to the background, retained by the GND). This may be why some are saying, your foreground is brighter than your background.
And personally, when i use GND, i go Matrix metering. Since i am using the GND to balance the whole scene, i might as well meter for the balance of the whole scene. Then i bracket to retain overall highlights and expose shadows and clean up later.
There is nothing wrong with spot metering though. Some do like to expose for different subject or foreground/background individually and blend them. That is why some don't need GND if they don't mind more work in blending.
But the exposure for the individual subject better be accurate or take a few bracketed shots to play safe. If not, one will go home to see his/her foreground 3-5 stops brighter than the sky...
As to when to use GND/what metering to use, it is all based on experience, trial and error and preference. We all do know there is no magic setting/setup for a particular scene by now la.

And err, night86mare's experience, knowledge and skill is much higher than mine. His eye for landscape composition and understanding of lighting condition is something i can only try harder to learn.
You are welcome. I am just trying to express my views with further explanation (and long winded) to why i see them this way.

You (guys) will improve one la. Just keep trying and sometimes, can take a break to view others' photos (there are tonnes online) and get some inspiration.

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