Northsider
New Member
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2010
- Messages
- 64
Haha, nice.
Nice pictures man. I wish I could take pics like that, the ones I take look like crap all the time.
Keep posting them here.
ps. Do you ever go to Rio de Janeiro? :whistling:
Nice pictures man. I wish I could take pics like that, the ones I take look like crap all the time.
Keep posting them here.
ps. Do you ever go to Rio de Janeiro? :whistling:
I've been to many places in Brazil, but never Rio. I've been to Sao Paulo, Santos, Fortaleza, and Manaus. Hopefully next year I'll get to Rio or some of the other cities. Just for fun, I made a map of all the places I've been to so far. Blue are countries, red are state or equivalents.
Smoked this one tonight
I desaturated the table only. The original was ok, but because the table was a shade of brown as well it clashed with the cigar too much.
I desaturated the table only. The original was ok, but because the table was a shade of brown as well it clashed with the cigar too much.
Very nice pictures.
With me being a very, very basic Photoshop user... can you explain desaturating an element of a photograph?
Did you vignette the photo during processing, or was that an effect of the lens?
I honestly don't remember if I added a vignette (I usually do in my pictures, I like the style). If I did, it was very slight.
I use Lightroom for most of my post work, and only photoshop (actually, I'm a GIMP user) for more advanced edits.
Simple desaturation can be done by going to Colors > Desaturate (I'm sure it's pretty similar in Photoshop, just different menu name, etc.). There are a few different options to change it to greyscale, choose the one that suits you. Another method is to use the channel mixed, but that's a bit more complicated and a google tutorial could explain it better than I could. Below I'll show you roughly what I did with GIMP, if you use Photoshop you can find similar tools.
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Now, to make the selective color, you basically have 2 layers: one color and one greyscale. The greyscale layer is on top, and the color one is on the bottom. You then want to erase from the greyscale layer the parts you want the color to show through.
Duplicate the color photo: Layer > Duplicate Layer
Add an alpha channel to the greyscale layer (so the top layer is transparent and the bottom will show through when you erase from the top). From the Layer menu > Add Alpha Channel (this may or may not be a step with photoshop, but this is how I do it in GIMP)
Erase from the top image
Hope this helps...
I highly recommend Lightroom. It really makes your workflow easier. Instead of navigating menus in Photoshop you just change sliders
I never use that. The only thing I use layers for is this selective coloring.I highly recommend Lightroom. It really makes your workflow easier. Instead of navigating menus in Photoshop you just change sliders
I think the hardest thing is separating the layers, unless your magnetic lasso-fu is very strong.
. I love taking pictures; however I don't know a great deal about aperture, ISO, etc. Maybe one of these days I'll sit down and figure it out.
I think I'm going to buy Photoshop now.
But wish you recommend getting for a first timer?
The CS5, Lightroom 3 or Elements 9?
TIA.