Help with exposure correction
hockeytown74
Registered Users Posts: 163 Major grins
I have a picture that has some sunlight on the subject chin and mouth and was wondering if someone knows how to make it the same color/tone as the rest of his face. I lack in the photoshop skills, so any help would be much appreciated.
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Here is the original.
http://www.hockeytown.smugmug.com/
http://www.hockeytown.smugmug.com/
P.S. I think I prefer the shot in colour, or full black and white - not a mix (or if you must mix it up, I would try keeping the hero colour and the background mono)!
Regards,
Stephen Marsh
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
I only shoot in raw and then covert them to Jpegs in Lightroom. I know about exposure and suck at photoshop when it comes to dodging and burning and things like that. I can email someone the raw file if they could help. Thanks.
http://www.hockeytown.smugmug.com/
i'll let others chime in on the step-by-steps for doing this.
If you have raw then you should be able to recover data in the highlights (dependent on base exposure).
OPTION A:
One will have a ''normal" file rendered from LR as you intend the image to appear, rendered as a TIFF or PSD rather than JPEG.
Next one will also produce a second TIFF, this time using negative exposure values and or highlight recovery sliders - in order to bring in detail in the blown area on the face. This image will be darker than the first render.
Then both images are layered together in Photoshop, with the darker image over the top of the "normal" image. One then adds a layer mask (black) hiding the upper layer - then painting with gray tones or white the area that needs darkening is revealed.
This is only a general description, one may have to do other things to get the tones in harmony.
OPTION B:
Try to do it all in the raw processor - using negative exposure and or recovery, then using other options such as fill light, curves or whatnot to lighten the dark image.
Of course, there are other options to try as well!
Stephen Marsh
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
Thanks for all the advice, I will try now to get this fixed. Thanks again.
http://www.hockeytown.smugmug.com/
Looking at the image, I’d be shocked if you don’t have plenty of highlight data in that area you wish to adjust in the raw data.
Author "Color Management for Photographers"
http://www.digitaldog.net/