Unfortunately, I don't own a really good film camera.  As you can see, the one I used for this shot used center weighted metering, rendering shadow detail just fine, but blowing out everything else.  Yuck.  The lens is also not exceptionally sharp.  Double yuck.
So after I had my local Costco 1 Hour Photo develop, print, and scan me a Premium CD (8x12 inches, or 2400x3600 pixels.  You youngsters just think 8.6 megapixels and move on), I put the image in Photoshop for some much needed loving.  Here's the result, which I appear to have taken a bit far, but then, how far is too far when you're making art?If you're wondering how to do this yourself, you can pick up a Scott Kelby book for the full scoop under "Fixing Overexposed Images", or just follow these simple steps in Photoshop Elements.
Open the image.
Drag background layer onto Create a New Layer Icon.
Change layer blend mode from Normal to Multiply.
Control-J adds new layers if you need more than one. This one has four extra.
If you need half a layer, highlight the top layer and reduce the opacity.
After doing the above, I switched to Quick Fix, bumped the shadows up 25%, knocked the highlights down 25%, increased mid tone contrast 25%, and sharpened it 25%.
I then saved it as a .jpg, which is very important. If you save it as a .psd, it will be about 109MB, vs 6.9MB.
Is it photography?
No, it's art.
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