So I know that the cliché water blurring is a long exposure, usually with a GND in pic related. What I don't understand is how to keep the leaves in focus if there's a slight breeze, understanding that they move during the several seconds that you keep your shutter open. Is this all have to do with exposure blending or luminosity masking? It's all greek to me.
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>>2981007
try this on a day when there is not a slight breeze
>>2981007
Take two photos and photoshop it.
>>2981065
"Photoshop" it is a broad statement. What might I be doing in photoshop? What two photos?
>>2981007
This could have been easily shot NOT in wind.
But of course you can blend multiple shots no problem. Use the average image editor with layers (trivial idea: mix the long exposure waterfall with the aligned 1/200 shot in the remaining frame) or use dedicated software that can deal with multiple exposures in more fancy ways, if you prefer.
>>2981076
One picture with blurry water
one picture with sharp leaves
Take the picture with sharp leaves
Blend in the blurry water with masks
why you say this is cliché
What 10stop filters are you all using?
>>2981176
because it's in every single photography for dummies book ever published? people who do this are almost as bad as those retards who just take pictures of the sides of buildings