Posts Tagged ‘Adjustments’

Lightroom’s Adjustment Brush Essentials

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Lightroom BrushHere’s an interesting article for you. Lightroom’s Adjustment Brush Essentials with Rob Sylvan.

Learn how to master the Adjustment Brush Tool in Lightroom with Rob Sylvan from Lightroomers. In this article, Rob details some interesting insights into using the Adjustment Brush and shares his tips and techniques.

Adjustment Brush Tool is used to make local adjustments to your images. While making adjustments, you can use a mix of different settings like colour, saturation, contrast, exposure and more.

I remember when Adjustment Brush was introduced in Lightroom 2. It was probably the most amazing new feature in Lightroom 2, I just loved it and I have been using it since then. And the Adjustment Brush is non-destructive – the adjustments it creates can be edited or removed at any time. And remember, Lightroom remembers everything you do while working on our images so you can track it down at any time! No limits to History (unlike in Photoshop).

Here’s the link to the Rob’s article:

Lightroom’s Adjustment Brush Essentials by Rob Sylvan.

I hope you’ll enjoy it. Have a fabulous weekend! :-)

 

Colour Correct with Colour Sampler Tool

Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

Good day to everyone.

Today is the day of colour casting… What can you do if you have an image with colour cast, for example a scan of an old photograph? Is there anything you cna do to get rid of it? Of course you can! :-)

This technique works really well on the images that have colour cast like old scanned photographs as an example.

We’ll start by finding the Shadows and Highlights in the image to find real blacks and whites. We will be using Color Sampler Tool and Threshold Adjustment. Here is our Before and After:

We’ll start by Selecting Color Sampler Tool and in the Options Bar choosing 3 by 3 Average.

Color Sampler ToolWe will need Info Panel so make sure it is open. If it is not, go to Window -> Info to open it. Info Panel will display colour values for pixels and will give us some important information.

Let’s add the Threshold Adjustment Layer:

Threshold AdjustmentIn the Threshold Adjustment window, we will set Shadows and Highlights. Let’s start by setting Shadows first – drag the slider in the Threshold dialog box to the left until everything goes white, then start slowly dragging it to the right until some black pixels start showing through.

Threshold in PhotoshopNow Shift-Click on the image (on the black area) to set sampling point. A new sampling point with number 1 will appear.

Next, do the same in the opposite direction – move the slider to the right, look for the white pixels and add a sampling point number 2.

If you look into the Info Panel, the numbers show you if any of the channels are dominant creating tint. To remove the tint, go to the Levels adjustment, select Shadows Eyedropper and click on the 1st sampling point. Next, select Highlights Eyedropper and click on the 2nd sampling point.

Select OK to accept changes and you’re done! :-)

Can I clip an Adjustment Layer to more than one layer?

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Clipping Mask in Photoshop

Good morning everyone. I hope you are having a fabulous week. I know I am! :-)

Today a Photoshop topic.

This is a question I recently got from one of the delegates on one of my Photoshop courses:

“I have an adjustment layer that I want to clip to more than one layer in my layers panel. Can I do that?”

This is a really good question. By default, when you clip an adjustment layer and there are number of ways to do it, Photoshop will clip the adjustment layer to the layer that sits directly below.

What if you want to clip it to more than one layer, let’s say that you don’t want it to apply to all the layers below, just two or three of them.

You can group layers: Layer -> Group Layers or Ctrl/Cmd + G, change Blend Mode for the group from Pass Through to Normal and clip the adjustment layer to top most layer in the group! And you’re done! :-)

Have a fantastic weekend! See you on Monday!

HDR Toning in Photoshop CS5 Video

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

Hello everyone. As promised I am enclosing the video about HDR Toning. I hope you enjoy watching it and let me know if you have any comments.

Tomorrow I am going to talk about a new great feature in Photoshop CS5 – Mini Bridge.

Till tomorrow.  :-)

HDR Toning in Photoshop CS5

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

HDR Toning is a fantastic new feature in Adobe Photoshop CS5! You should definitely try it out and you will love it!

HDR Toning adjustment is primarily designed for 32-bit HDR images, but it can also be applied  to 16-bit as well as 8-bit images. If applied to 8-bit images, it creates an HDR-like effect. This is the example I am going to show you today. An 8-bit image converted to an HDR-like effect in a very easy way.

HDR Toning command allows you to apply the full range of HDR contrast and exposure settings an individual image.

Here are the before and after and tomorrow I will post a video showing how I achieved this effect.

Have a wonderful day and see you tomorrow  :-)

Before

HDR Toning before

After

HDR Toning after

HDR Toning in Adobe Photoshop CS5

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Hello everyone.

Today I thought I would upload a photo I took from my hotel’s balcony in Dublin.

I quickly adjusted the image using new HDR Toning adjustment in Photoshop CS5. Very quick and very very nice effect. There are many different presets and this is just one of them.

I hope you will enjoy it and maybe we will see some tutorial on HDR Toning soon.

HDR Toning in Photoshop CS5

Photoshop is 20 years old…

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Did you know that it has been 20 years since the first version of Photoshop was introduced? That is quite a lot of time for an application. Photoshop has definitely changed our lives and the way we work with imaging (now digital imaging). It also has changed a lot through all these years. Many wonderful new features were introduced in every major version.

Did you know that Photoshop 1.0 was released on Macintosh only? It was created by John and Thomas Knoll. Did you know that it was first called Display before it became Photoshop? Probably not.

Photoshop 1.0 was released in 1990 as Adobe Photoshop and its Toolbar at that time looked somehow similar to Photoshop CS4′s Toolbar, don’t you think?  ;-)

Photoshop 1.0′s interface was very simple with limited number of menus as on screenshot below, however there were many filters included in the application. Only a few adjustment though as can be seen on the screenshot below.

And there were only two panels at that time.

The most important features introduced in Photoshop major releases:

  • Ps 2.0 – Photoshop ships on Windows for the first time, Pen Tool, Duotones, support for CMYK
  • Ps 3.0 – Layers and Tabbed Palettes introduced
  • Ps 4.0 – Actions, Adjustment Layers
  • Ps 5.0 – Editable Text, History Palette
  • Ps 6.0 – Blending Options, Layer Styles, Vector Shapes
  • Ps 7.0 – Healing Brush, New File Browser (later replaced by Bridge), Batch Rename
  • Ps CS   – Lens Blur, Layer Groups, 16-Bit support
  • Ps CS2- Noise Reduction, Red Eye Removal Tool, Vanishing Point, 32-Bit support
  • Ps CS3- Auto Blend, Quick Selection Tool, Clone Source Palette, 3D
  • PS CS4-Content Aware Scaling, Masks and Adjustments Panels
  • Ps CS5-coming soon…  ;-)