Dx0 are giving away free copies of DxO OpticsPro 11 Essential up until Nov 30th, at that price you might as well try it! :)
http://www.dxo.com/us/practicalphotography
Dx0 are giving away free copies of DxO OpticsPro 11 Essential up until Nov 30th, at that price you might as well try it! :)
http://www.dxo.com/us/practicalphotography
Lightroom often seems to be overlooked as Photoshop’s odd little sibling and while it doesn’t offer Photoshop’s in-depth image editing capabilities there’s still plenty it can do to make your photographic life easier.
The main difference to remember is that Lightroom is a catalog of all your images and as such offers many ways to locate images far beyond which folder it is stored in, other search criteria can involve:
And there are plenty more search options to choose from beyond these. Some of these will require you to tag images as you process them, but some are automatically maintained such as date taken, camera used, lens used etc.
The Metadata flag in the "Library Filter" is a good place to start learning some of the standard options that are available:
The Orton Effect was originally developed by Michael Orton in the mid-1980s and uses 2 variations of the same exposure to give a scene a dream-like glow while still holding onto fine details.
Although there are multiple ways to achieve this kind of look I recently came across a great youtube video by Michael Shainblum explaining his recipe:
Applying this to one my own images gave a subtle but pleasing outcome:
Google has released it's Nik Collection of filters for free, including 7 modules such as Analog Efex Pro, Silver Efex Pro, Dfine and Sharpener Pro... well worth a download, go and grab them while you can!
https://www.google.com/nikcollection/
NB These instructions are for Elements – in full Photoshop the menus will be slightly different
(NB: if you use a laptop do not try to use the trackpad - it’s far too blunt an instrument for this sort of work - get a mouse and save your sanity)
It’s a good idea to duplicate the image and edit on that. This protects the original image (i.e. the Background layer) and you can always go back to it. To duplicate a layer, click on the Layer menu and click on Duplicate Layer. The Duplicate Layer window pops up, click OK. The layer is by default called “Background copy” - note that in the History palette the action is called Duplicate Layer.
Method 1: make a duplicate layer from the Background layer (as above). Now click on the arrow next to Normal (these are the blending modes) and click on Multiply. Click the duplicate layer on and off using the eye icon to see the before and after effect. Now click again on the arrow and this time choose Overlay to see the effect.
Method 2: make a duplicate layer from the Background layer. Go to the Enhance menu, click on Adjust Color and click on Remove Color. This turns the layer to black and white. Now choose the Multiply blending mode to see the effect.
Note on blending modes: each blend mode has a different effect on how the pixels of each layer are mixed together. You can read up on this but it is quite complicated and not really necessary. The main thing is to experiment with blend modes and use different images. The Multiply blend mode (for example) will work differently on different images. It’s up to you to choose which works best for the effect you want. The most useful modes are Darken, Multiply, Screen, Overlay and Soft Light. Some of the modes give quite bizarre results so are rarely used.
After experimenting with the blend modes try dropping the opacity of the blending mode (i.e. the top layer that the blending mode has been applied to) to see the effect. Use the opacity slider to alter it.
A border can really add a “feel” to an image - open the image to which you want to add a border. This will be the Background Layer. Go to the File menu, click Open and navigate to where the border image is. Click Open and the image will open.
Paste the image in (see separate instructions - “Pasting another Image Into the Project”). The border image is obscuring the Background image so go to the Blend modes arrow and choose Screen. This mode causes lighter parts of the top layer image to remain and so block out what is on the layer beneath but darker parts of the top layer image are discarded and therefore whatever is on the layer beneath shows through – therefore the Background image shows through the black area of the border image but not through the white areas of the border image. So the final effect is an image with a roughened edge and white surround.
Images can sometimes have a cool, blue cast e.g. landscapes taken in the middle of the day. A warm filter can improve it. Open the image which you want to “warm up” - this will be your Background layer. Go to the Layer menu, click on New Adjustment Layer and click on Photo Filter. The New Layer window pops up, just click OK and the Adjustments box opens. By default the Photo Filter is usually a warming one. Click the “X” at the top right - the Adjustments box will close. In the layer stack you will see the Photo Filter at the top. Click the eye icon on and off to see the effect of the filter. (For now ignore the white mask). As before you can alter the opacity to weaken the effect of the filter and you could change the blend mode if you want to.
Like borders, a texture can transform an image. As a start, find textures at home - grass, wallpaper, carpet, rust, paint, bricks etc. and take a picture. Then follow the same method as adding a border - experiment with the blend modes and opacity.
After trying out these straight-forward techniques, practise saving the layers of the image as a PSD file (use File, Save As and choose PSD in the Format drop down list), then flatten the layers (Layer menu, Flatten Image) and save as a jpg with the same name as the PSD file (File, Save As and choose jpg in the Format drop down list). You can end up with several PSD versions of one image (or PSD’s of several images) but PSD files have no picture on to differentiate them. By saving a jpg version with the same name as the PSD file you can easily see what each image is.
Then practise re-opening your PSD files and see the layers reappear intact as you left them.
PASTING ANOTHER IMAGE INTO THE PROJECT
Differences between the two methods – Method 1 will exactly match the images together whereas in Method 2 you match by eye. In Method 2 you can hold down the Shift key while you use the Move tool which is supposed to exactly match the images but it does not always work.
Once you get used to using the shortcuts (Ctrl+A, Ctrl+C, Ctrl+W, Ctrl+V) it is very quick to add an image.
Using the Move tool in Method 2 is a quick way of adding and positioning a selection.
Competition images, whether for club or external competitions, must be all your own work. So while using borders from say, photo magazines, is OK for practising with, it is not OK to use them for images entered into competition.
Making your own borders is easy.
Note: a white border with black inner results in a white border on the final image when used with the Screen blend mode.
a black border with white inner results in a black border when used with the Multiply blend mode.
You can use one border and swap (ie invert) the black and white so you do not have to make two borders to get each effect -
To invert a border – have it open in the edit workspace – click on the Layer menu, choose New Adjustment Layer, then choose Invert, click OK and the colours will be swapped. Resave with a new name.