The first one is the best just bump up the saturation in the sky. (if you have photoshop you can even duplicate the layer then colorize it to pop the warms and cools and put it as a 15% overlay)
This is a quick tweak i did in ps using the above technique.
and crop probably all of them. maybe just a bit, make sure nothing is too close to the edge, but the tighter the better usually.
The first one is the best just bump up the saturation in the sky. (if you have photoshop you can even duplicate the layer then colorize it to pop the warms and cools and put it as a 15% overlay)
This is a quick tweak i did in ps using the above technique.
and crop probably all of them. maybe just a bit, make sure nothing is too close to the edge, but the tighter the better usually.
An edu version of PS cs3 from a school is $300. The regular version is more like $600. The gimp does the basic things photoshop does, but is free. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GIMP
The reasons the third one isn't so good is because the angle of the photo and flash (on camera) are just boring. You should probably get an off camera flash setup if you really get into photography. Though, I've seen some pretty good stuff done with a built in flash.
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