Italian Brown Trout

Mountainbrookie wrote:
I'm not convinced that they're photoshopped. I've caught wild browns with red spots just as bright as those, however they weren't as large or as numerous. If they had as many as those fish they'd look very similar. I've also caught wild browns with pale red spots.

If they bumped up the saturation or used a filter it would also show in the hands that are holding the trout. That is unless they went out of their way to edit the pics.

Good point about the hands. I've changed my mind. I think the colors are real. Those fish are amazing.
 
Andy,

Irish trout are too drunk to take a fly.

Andy
 
In Prosek's "Trout of the World" he has a watercolor of a brown trout from the Calore River east of Naples that looks a lot like these fish. Very prominent red spotting although I agree with many others that the photos in this thread are enhanced. He has paintings of five other trout from Italy, none of which resemble the photos.

I always thought the Italian trout displayed a prominent pinky ring on their adipose fin. :-D
 
So because it doesn't look like a trout in a painting it's not real? :lol:

Explain the trout in the video then. How did they 'enhance' that one?
 
These trout from what I have read were a strain that was develpoed in a particular hatchery and were stocked.They have now reproduced in the wild and comprimise about 50 % of the wild browns that are in Italy. I have found this from several sources.

http://www.salmonfishingforum.com/forums/thread21353-7.html


I found another reference that stated the hatchery was "enhanced" by Mussolini to produce these fish, but I can't locate that reference again.
 
Do they practice C & R in Italy.............or do they whack 'em?
 
Do they provide favors?
 
Why is it that their hatcheries produce something as beautiful as those fish and all we get are lightning trout? :lol:

Maybe we can trade them even up and get some of those over here. ;-)
 
Because lightning trout originated in W.V.

Italy> W.V.

Chicken parmigiana > possom parmigiana
 
Mountainbrookie wrote:
So because it doesn't look like a trout in a painting it's not real? :lol:

Explain the trout in the video then. How did they 'enhance' that one?

My point was that Prosek's book and painting confirm the existence of these Italian brown trout with very prominent red spotting. I still believe the spotting in the photos looks enhanced. Didn't watch the video. Maybe I will over the weekend.
 
Spats wrote:
I thought Italian Trout wore gold chains...?
That would be gypsy trout.
 
No ones being hateful, just poking fun. And if you were to ask, everyone on the board is a minority of some sort. Don't be offended. Be proud of your heritage.
 
This may sound wacky but is it possible special lighting or light reflectors were used in the video?

I found it odd that the video is only 51 seconds.
 
I've looked at the photo's on flicker in their original size and I still don't believe they're enhanced. It's all about the lighting. Here's a pic of a wild brown from PA that has not been edited in any way, taken with a run of the mill point and shoot camera. Note the red spots where the shadow is created by my arm, they almost glow. If you had more and larger red spots on this fish it would look exactly the same as those in the original post. The lighting makes all of the difference in the world.

Shun the nonbelievers! :lol:

 

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We've almost all caught trout like the one in your picture. In no way do the colors pop like these pizza trout. Nice trout by the way.
That video is what convinced me.

However, like myself some of our posters probably remember a previous attempt at something like this by the original poster.
http://www.paflyfish.com/forums/open-forums/the-ot-jam-forum/wild-or-stocked-and-what-is-it-/17,24804,360661.html#forumpost360661
 
As someone who uses photoshop for a living, the red spots are indeed very vivid (as we all agree), but the pictures themselves are further enhanced. You wouldn't just select an entire photo and ramp up a color saturation, that would make things look alien. You select the areas you want to pop (it takes 10 seconds?) and the play with one or two settings for a rudimentary effect.


I did this by hand in less than a minute (hence the rough edges). In reality, you don't even need to select an area with photoshop - just choose which color you like and then change the saturation/hue of all like colors in the image. I just selected an area to give you an idea of how it can work.

Original:
1026_5165f1e30bdcd.jpg


Edited:
EditedTrout1.jpg


EditedTrout2.jpg
 
Now I would believe that if the fish in the video didn't look exactly like the first picture, even underwater. 🙂
 
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