- Before You Color Correct Anything, Do This First!
- Photo Quick Fix
- Getting a Visual Readout (Histogram) of Your Corrections
- Color Correcting Digital Camera Images
- Dave's Amazing Trick for Finding a Neutral Gray
- Studio Portrait Correction Made Simple
- Drag-and-Drop Instant Color Correction
- Adjusting Flesh Tones
- Warming Up (or Cooling Down) a Photo
- Color Correcting One Problem Area Fast!
- Getting a Better Conversion from Color to Black and White
- Correcting Color and Contrast Using Color Curves
Studio Portrait Correction Made Simple
If you’re shooting in a studio—whether it’s portraits or products—there’s a technique you can use that makes the color correction process so easy that you’ll be able to train laboratory test rats to correct photos for you. In the back of this book, I’ve included a color swatch card (it’s perforated so you can easily tear it out). After you get your studio lighting set the way you want it, and you’re ready to start shooting, just put this swatch card into your shot (just once) and take the shot. What does this do for you? You’ll see.
Step One:
When you’re ready to start shooting and the lighting is set the way you want it, tear out the swatch card from the back of this book and place it within your shot (if you’re shooting a portrait, have the subject hold the card for you), and then take the shot. After you’ve got one shot with the swatch card, you can remove it and continue with the rest of your shoot.
SCOTT KELBY
Step Two:
When you open the first photo taken in your studio session, you’ll see the swatch card in the photo. By having a card that’s pure white, neutral gray, and pure black in your photo, you no longer have to try to determine which area of your photo is supposed to be black (to set the shadows), which area is supposed to be gray (to set the midtones), or which area is supposed to be white (to set the highlights). They’re right there in the card. Note: I’ve even included a Camera Raw White Balance swatch if you’re working with RAW files. See “The Essential Adjustments: White Balance” in Chapter 2 for more info.
Step Three:
Press Ctrl-L (Mac: Command-L) to bring up the Levels dialog. Click the black Eyedropper on the black panel of the card (to set shadows), the middle Eyedropper on the gray panel (for midtones), and the white Eyedropper on the white panel (to set the highlights), and the photo will nearly correct itself. No guessing, no Threshold adjustment layers, no using the Info palette to determine the darkest areas of the image—now you know exactly which part of that image should be black and which should be white.
Step Four:
Press C to get the Crop tool, crop the card out of the image, and you’re set. Best of all, now that you have the Levels settings for the first image, you can correct the rest of the photos using the same settings: Just open the next photo and press Ctrl-Alt-L (Mac: Command-Option-L) to apply the exact settings to this photo that you did to the swatch card photo. Or, you can use the “Drag-and-Drop Instant Color Correction” method that appears in this chapter.