In a message dated 10/29/2007 9:10:56 A.M.  Pacific Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Paul is thinking in the  right direction, but improving the rendition
of those peaks is like squeezing  blood from a stone, and the outcome
will always be a touch harsh.  The  fix you want is right there in the
lake.  The mirror image of the peaks  looks perfect at this resolution
(I don't know about full rez, though).   Simply copy the shot to a new
layer, and do a vertical flip on the background  layer.  You'll need to
nudge the bottom layer around until it's in  register with the top
layer, perhaps even a little vertical rescaling may be  required.  When
the peaks in the reflection are aligned with the peaks  in the original
picture, then gently erase the blown out details, and the  nice details
from the bottom layer will appear.  Be careful anywhere  there are
differences, such as the reflected tree which intrudes onto the  cliff
face in the reflected image.

Of course this is all moot if the  reflection is anything less than
perfect.  It would be better if you had  bracketed the shot and you had
a darker image to extract highlight details  from.  Please tell me you
bracketed (bracketing is not just a film  thing).

regards,
Anthony Farr

=============
Actually, that's  a pretty darn good idea. Clever.

Thanks, Marnie  :-)

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