Another excellent video. Thank you for making awesome effects accessible to those of us who are still learning. I am amazed at how easy you make it to create awesome photos.
11 лет назад
Short and direct tutorial, simply great, thanks!! the tip of adding 180 is marvellous.
Thank you tremendously, Gavin. I hate to even admit that this is a new concept for me albeit one I intend to practice and use. Wonderfully simple presentation on your part. Cheers.
You are right. And another way is to hold the Alt key and move the Hue slider. This gives you a 100% saturation preview, so you can choose the color you want and then just move the saturation to the amount you like.
Excellent tutorial. I wonder if this is the same thing they did to achieve the effect you see in movies like the Matrix (Green split toning) and The Book of Eli (sepia and blue)? Instead of making it black and white they decreased the saturation a bit to enhance the desired effect.
One benefit is that more people will have Photoshop than Lightroom. A lot of people also don't use Lightroom for their processing but instead things like Aperture or Capture One. Photoshop is a tool that most photographers will have. It also means less round tripping too if you're intending to do more complex edits rather than something simple like adjusting the levels and cropping and the like.
that was a good tutorial, but i am always confused as to how to decide the color combination for highlights and shadows...Can you give some suggestions about the best color combinations for highlights and shadows for portrait as well as landscape portrait images??
Well, you don't have to use the saturation slider first. You can just use the little box on the right of "Highlights" and "Shadows" and then access to a color picker where you can choose you color and saturation at the same time.
it isnt just 180 that works for the split toning , you can use 90 ,270 and 360 .bigger the number more aggressive the tone difference. 180 is a "compliment oposite" hue. if you use "colour scheme designer"
Hey Gavin, any chance you could made a video about manually blending a few images together? I'm thinking about real estate shots with lots of detail everywhere, but without the ugly HDR look. :)