I'd appreciate any advice - thanks.

ISO 800, F2.8, 1.13sec, 125mm (using the 80-200)
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Portrait Recovery..Well after a night out shooting I came back and found in general a lot of shitty shots, this was one of them, but I really tried hard to recover it from the RAW which was soft and noisey. So how did I do, would this shot pass for ok, if not is there anything else I can do?
I'd appreciate any advice - thanks. ![]() ISO 800, F2.8, 1.13sec, 125mm (using the 80-200)
It's good, particularly so given the exposure time (your model must have held very still).
The only thing I can fault in your exposure / processing is that it's a bit muddy - as in no real white definition to balance the image out. From a quick play around, I tried adding a brightness/contrast bump of +10 on the brightness. Seemed to clean it up a bit and brought back some of the lighter tones.
Re: Portrait Recovery..
I'd say that's your problem. ISO 1600 @ 1/2 sec (or even pushed RAW files @ 1/4 sec) might have been more successful. It's a good shot, showing a lot of character, but at that size it's quite soft on the lower half of her face. Maybe try lightening it up a bit to draw attention away from the softer bottom half to the eyes, which seem sharp? So join in the chorus, and sing it one and all!
She was actually posing for someone else, and I was snapping at a further distance over their shoulder. I'll try playing with the brightness (but I'm on my laptop so its super hard to judge the brightness, but I agree on the muddiness). Here is the shot straight from raw. ![]()
it's not a shitty shot it just looks candid
sometimes that sort of blur and noise can give an image a nice feel subject matter is good of D-mo famous sydney fashion photographer your b+w treatment is probably as far as you can go to recover it
1/13s of a second sorry my Sony with the typo, at 125mm and 1.13 seconds I'm sure it would of been rubbish ![]() Thanks for the feedback.
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