Originally posted by Canada_Rockies You can, if you have enough patience.
please no offense intended.
first, thanks for sharing your hints on PP
FWIW, I am lazy and I am not good at PP because I haven't worked on it to learn how
so for those reasons I prefer "reality" and don't do a lot of PP: some cropping and lighting work is about my limit
MHO, YMMV
there is no reason not to do post production if that is your decision.
I did find it irritating once when I went to a introductory class on landscape photography and the photographer showed his photos but couldn't or wouldn't identify how he set up his camera: exposure, focal length, aperture etc
nor show us or tell us anything except (he admitted) photos which had been submitted to heavy post production work.
So the info I sought, he would not or could not provide