The more videos I see, less I think to know and I appreciate that, it is a sign that I am learning from you and that you are an excellent teacher. I like when you say "this is before, this is after" ... you sound like René Lavand doing his best tricks heheehhe regards.
Really liked what you showed regarding the LAB settings and how you can use the eyedropper tool, to meticulously match the color sample. Going to watch that section a few times, to let it really sink in ;)
You're amazing. I've watched a lot of tutorials (too many, probably) but have *never* seen this described and explained as well as you have done here. Thank you.
Thank you so, so, so much! Technique #5 is going to save my life when I change the color of my drab black car to a candy blue in Photoshop. Super AWESOME job!!!
Thanks the last technique solved all my problems, you have helped me like a ton! Now all I have to do is either choose a colour pallet or create mine using a color wheel 🤩🤩🤩🤩 now I found my hero, subbed
GREAT video! I want to find the 63 people who gave this a thumbs down and smack them! The man did his OWN commercials for christs sake! You CAN'T give a guy a thumbs down when he does his own plugs! LOL!
TIP: Always change the blending mode to "Luminosity" when making Levels or Curves adjustments. That way the edit only affects the brightness of the image and not the color.
Great stuff and thanks for sharing! I have a quick question in your last tip with the chair. When you dropped the two sample points, why do you prefer to change the sample points to LAB read outs instead of just leaving them as RGB?
Hey man just wanna say, I paid like $50 for a Udemy course because it had great views, but your videos are way better. Will buy your course after I get paid. Thanks man.
Hi, I watched the #5 way very carefully, but I missed the part of how do you select the chair from the load selection menu? I did not see you creating the chair selection and how?
Hi Nathaniel @tutvid Awesome video (as always). I've actually been trying to do this, so will be getting back to those images :D I may have missed it in one of your previous videos, but could you do one about colour space? (sRGB, Adobe RGB (1998), ProPhoto RGB are available on my pc) For example, when I export a photo in LR, which one should I get? Do I pick a different one if it's to be used as a wallpaper or if I want to print and frame it? Keep up the awesome work, and thanks in advance.
00:56 - Technique 1: Hue-Saturation layer mask 03:34 - Technique 2: Hue and Color blend modes 06:03 - Technique 3: Converting white or black to a color 09:20 - Technique 4: Targeting a specific color channel 12:34 - Technique 5: Using LAB to match an exact color
Great quality video! Q: how can you compensate loose color (bright colors) whenever you/me convert from RGB to CMYK Example green on RGB looks great but when is convert to CMYK the same green looks different green
Awesome video. I loved the section on changing the chair color. I've got a question, though. Instead of looking at LAB values and then trying to get them to match up using an RGB curves adjustment layer, wouldn't it make more sense to convert it to LAB and then do the curve in that instead of RGB? You could always do that step first and then either flatten and convert back to RGB or make it a smart object so you can go back in and change it later if necessary. Or am I completely off base?
You definitely can, but the way the numbers work in the LAB read out makes it much, much easier to get a matching color. Also, because you have the L (lightness) channel, you don't have to adjust overall brightness by adjusting all three (R,G, and B) channels in unison to try to adjust overall brightness. Hope that helps! (Great question, too!)
Hi sir, I hope you are fine, can you please tell me if there is a special technique to remove a green background from transparent fabric like curtain? and something that helps me remain the real quality of the photo because when i try to remove the green color it seams that the photo somehow loses its sharpness. thank you in advance :)
That's a hidden feature in Photoshop to add a little color the UI. It doesn't do anything as a tool, it just looks cool :D Here's how to get it: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Gcw_WRdmpn8.html
Is there a way to change only the [insert color here] objects within a picture without needing to mark the different objects? Say for example I have a picture of a rainbow, but I want to make the red part a neon green
can i do one of these to turn orange lighting into like a blue led lighting on a foggy pic? the image has fog but looks orange bc the street lamps, i want them to be blue
Hello tutvid /how can you select the dress becuz when i go to select opt and then and select the chanel it select all the image not only dress can you tell that plz!!/
Method 5 seems like a lot of manual work for something that is a purely numerical work, which sounds like something for the computer... is there no automatic way to do this?
How to change the color of something to white ? For ex: My friend wears a red dress/ green dress, now I would like to change to color to white, how can I do that ?