Sometimes the colours is flatten. Which tecnique is more efficient to brilliant colours?
Thanks
Alberto
Inviato dal mio HTC One S con Tapatalk 2
Sometimes the colours is flatten. Which tecnique is more efficient to brilliant colours?
Thanks
Alberto
Inviato dal mio HTC One S con Tapatalk 2
If I adjust my colors, it is in post. I use Lightroom 4. I tend to increase vibrance and color saturation. At times, I adjust specific color channels, but that is an uncommon event.
You can also do this in camera by adjusting your picture style. As a question for everyone else, I've always assumed that picture style only impacts Jpegs and not RAW files, is that true?
Ditto. Thinking about the word "brilliant" makes me think it's the vibrance slider you're after. Even in Photoshop.
If you're using a tool that isn't one of Adobe's offerings, I'm no help to you.
Picture style most definitely affects raw. Of course, you have more digital info to bail yourself out with. Personally, my camera stays on the "faithful" mode.
Last edited by Rocco; 04-29-2013 at 03:28 PM.
I usually use vibrance, which tends to produce a more 'natural' result than saturation.
True, at least directly. However, every RAW image is converted to JPG in-camera (that JPG is embedded in the RAW container as a preview image). Picture Style (and other settings like ALO, etc.) are applied to it. Importantly, that JPG is what you see on the LCD review, and it's used to generate the histogram. So, To the extent that you make exposure decisions based on the histogram or the blinkies, picture style can indirectly affect the RAW file.
Before I use Vibrancy, I adjust Levels or Curves if necessary. That makes pictures a bit more contrasty, and already brings out colors more. Vibrancy comes last.
Arnt
I agree
I make changes usually in this order: WHITE BALANCE, CURVES, CONTRAST
Saturation and Vibrance colors are usually last.
Thank you
If you use Photoshop, there are some awesome actions available that produce beautiful results! The best ones are the ones that have each adjustment as a separate layer. That way you can tweak them to your liking (with either opacity adjustments or layer masks) and everything is completely non-destructive to your original photo. Love them!
Another one:
I know that picture style affects raw in DPP. Is it correct?