I am not sure if this is what you are looking for...On a paying job I would take more care not to blow out the background boat so much (no layer masks or selections were used in this global edit).
Step A- Add Shadow/Highlight around 25%. Also add color curves with a s-shaped curve... I made the bottom part a lot steeper.
The point of doing this is to bring out shadow detail and increase contrast. Increasing contrast normally hurts shadow detail, so that's why I use shadow/highlight.
Step B- Use the brightness/contrast filter to increase shadow where the fog is. This tends to counteract the effect of fog. You could also use levels or curves here.
Step C- Lower the gamma (via Levels adjustment, the mid slider) on the bottom part of the image to add a quasi-vignette.
I like the boats in fog
This is a fun photo. Thanks for sharing it. I like the boats in fog...in fact, I would enhance that thought even more. (But it's not my photo). Here is what I would do if it were mine. Please let me know if you want me to delete this. Congrats on a great photo!
Ruvka: I'm curious, what method are you using to remove the purple? I see a lot of yellow.
Hi glennchan,
This is what I meant about spending too much time mucking around with CS3, I made so many changes I can't remember them all. I will try to go back and do it again and record all the changes I have made.
Hi glennchan,
This is what I meant about spending too much time mucking around with CS3, I made so many changes I can't remember them all. I will try to go back and do it again and record all the changes I have made.
Photoshop can save your editing history to a text file and/or as metadata embedded in the image - look in your Photoshop preferences.
Some people may record an action, or write down the steps by hand.
Great stuff comes from mucking around, if you can remember the key moves!
Comments
Stephen Marsh
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
Step A- Add Shadow/Highlight around 25%. Also add color curves with a s-shaped curve... I made the bottom part a lot steeper.
The point of doing this is to bring out shadow detail and increase contrast. Increasing contrast normally hurts shadow detail, so that's why I use shadow/highlight.
Step B- Use the brightness/contrast filter to increase shadow where the fog is. This tends to counteract the effect of fog. You could also use levels or curves here.
Step C- Lower the gamma (via Levels adjustment, the mid slider) on the bottom part of the image to add a quasi-vignette.
Step A attached.
This is a fun photo. Thanks for sharing it. I like the boats in fog...in fact, I would enhance that thought even more. (But it's not my photo). Here is what I would do if it were mine. Please let me know if you want me to delete this. Congrats on a great photo!
Some of My Photos: app.electrikfolio.com/v/steven-hatch
Finally got a chance to muck around with it a bit, looks a bit sharper, not sure about the color of the boats now.
Rukva, if you like the tone but not the colour, simply layer your edited image over the original in Luminosity blend mode, as below.
Hope this helps,
Stephen Marsh
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
Boats are a little brighter here than they should be, just for web viewing purposes:
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Wot do you think?
This is what I meant about spending too much time mucking around with CS3, I made so many changes I can't remember them all. I will try to go back and do it again and record all the changes I have made.
Photoshop can save your editing history to a text file and/or as metadata embedded in the image - look in your Photoshop preferences.
Some people may record an action, or write down the steps by hand.
Great stuff comes from mucking around, if you can remember the key moves!
Stephen Marsh
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
No...I don't think there is ever such a point!