Concise and clear as always. One additional detail worth sharing is that to get uniform selections using multiple control points the circles of influence must enclose the centre point of the adjacent control point(s). In fact, this is the most useful feature of the visible circle, so far as I can tell!
Thank you and also for adding the additional point. Yes, you do need to overlap the circles to achieve a uniform selection. How much by really depends on the Diffusion, Luminance and Chrominance slider settings.
@@RobinWhalley For sure. With your tutorials that is always the case. And a man can tell when someone is making videos for views and sponsorship deals and when someone enjoys teaching and makes videos for students. For learners. You are the latter category. Kudos.
In our days, is no time to take hours to edit a image. That's why now smartphone is on top. From Nik Collection, I use in Affinity Photo, only Dfine. Other tools are strange for me
Have you tried Snapseed for editing on a smart phone? It hasn't been updated for a while but it's still a great tool. It was originally developed by Nik Software before Google bought them.
This is great but all these tutorials feature an image that is already amazing and you just are throwing a few tweaks. How about taking a less than photo and making something decent from it, a bit more relatable?
I pleased you think the image looks amazing already but I would disagree. Also the video isn't about making a bad image look good. It's about how to use the selection tools in Nik to make adjustments. But you have given me an idea for a video about improving images with editing. I've added it to my to do list. Thanks.