Sepia?
Aaron Wilson
Registered Users Posts: 339 Major grins
On the lower end camera's a lot of them have a sepia setting on them. Is there a way I can do that same setting in photoshop cs? I have a friend that loves that style and she wants me to convert a picture of her from color to that. Plus as her thinking goes her 2.1mp camera is better then my 20d... lol... they thing things like that make it a better camera vs. what the camera actually does
0
Comments
If you can't find what you're looking for let us know!
All feed back is welcomed!!
http://www.dipphoto.com/
:lust :lust
- Convert the image to B&W, but leave the image in a color mode (i.e. RGB, CMYK, LAB, etc.) - One fast way is Image > Adjustments > Desaturate (press Ctrl + Shift + U on a PC or Command + Shift + U on a Mac)
- Add a Photo Filter adjustment layer by clicking on the "Create new fill or adjustment layer" button in the layers pallete and selecting "Photo Filter..." If you hold down the Control key (on a PC, Command key on a Mac) while you click on the "Create new fill or adjustment layer" button you can bypass the New Layer dialog box.
- In the Photo Filter dialog box select Sepia from the list of filter types and play around with the density slider to get the look you want.
One thing to keep in mind is that if you find a Sepia conversion method that you like, you can make it an action so it becomes a one button click operation.The Hue slider, the top one, that controls the color. Over to the left, just before it gets to black and white, it gets to sepia. Then the saturation, it controls the, uh, saturation.
Basically with most sepia those two sliders are almost all the way to the left, not far enough for black and white, some brown will come in, that is the "sepia".
You can play with that, I do. I have found that usually I like the sepia toned down, not heavy. I try to get the hue where I like it, and I don't like much yellow, then I do the saturation a bit less than I used to. It is a personal thing, IMO.
There is also a thing on PS CS, Photo Filters, I think it is called, under images, under whatever... I use it to make a photo warmer or cooler, but it does have a sepia setting. That would probably do it right there.
I really do like that Hue/saturation thing as some things I want darker and some lighter, etc.
If I haven't been clear, get back to me.
ginger
Do you have a way you like better and why?
Also, could you do a short tutorial, I mean short like you just did on sepia, could you do it on making something an "action".
ginger
Your 20D will also shoot in Sepia. Menu / parameters / B/W / Toning / Sepia.
"The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over."-Hunter S.Thompson
While ther are several ways to achieve the practially same result sepia-wise, I'd say using Hue/Sauration dialog (and its Ctrl+U shortcut:-) is the quickest easiest one - for yours truly, that is.
- Ctrl+U
- Colorize
- Hue=15
- Saturation=25
This gives you a good starting point, which you can tweak on image-per-image basis.It's much faster to do that to explain. And if you find out that you like a particular setting, make it an action, assign the shortcut - and it will be faster than any other tool:-) (let alone you 'll be even able to do the batch processing:-)
I clearly remember my own personal frustration when I was doing my first steps in photoshop and was trying to locate "sepia" command (for which I was used to from all the previous cheapo-foto-editors) and could not find it.
Now, six months, four books and hundreds of hours later:-), I'm just smiling at myself...:-)
PS rulez!
Good luck!
Cheers!
I usually convert my images to B&W (using the channel mixer or zero-zero's technique) and then add a Hue/Saturation adjustment layer. In the Hue/Saturation dialog box I turn on the Colorize option and adjust the sliders to get the look I want.
I'll try to have something up this evening
Fish is correct - The 20D shoots very nice incamera sepia images like this
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
Take a look here. Let me know if works for you!
Thanks,
ginger
PS, you should see my REAL Tri-X photos under the People, etc thread.:D
image>adjustment>channel mixer> check monochrome
image>adjustment>variations> check on more yellow, then more red until the proper hue is reached
image>adjustment>hue and saturation> lower saturation untill color intensity is correct.
This one was also done in-camera:
"The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over."-Hunter S.Thompson