Adjusting by Eye with VariationsThe most obvious way to make a color adjustment is to compare before and after views of an image. In Photoshop, the tool for doing this is called Variations. It's the last item on the Image Figure 6.2. The seven thumbnails at lower-left adjust hue, whereas the right-side set of three adjusts brightness.[View full size image] ![]() Adjusting Shadows, Midtones, Highlights, and SaturationWhen you use Variations to adjust a color image, you have the option of individually adjusting shadows, midtones, highlights, or overall color saturation. Shadows, midtones, and highlights are Photoshop's terms for the darks, middle tones, and light tones, respectively, in the picture (or what would be black, gray, and white in grayscale). When you correct them with Variations, you change the color (hue) of the shadow, midtone, or highlight. Saturation affects all of them at once, increasing or decreasing the intensity of the color, although not changing it.When you select shadows, midtones, or highlights, you adjust the hue and brightness of only that part of the picture. The advantage here is that you can adjust the midtones one way and the highlights or shadows another way, if you choose. Each setting is independent of the others, and you can, for example, set the midtones to be more blue, thus brightening the sky, yet still set the shadows to be more yellow, offsetting the blueness that they possess inherently.Hour 5, "Color Modes and Color Models," hue refers to the color of an object or selection. Brightness is a measurement of how much white or black is added to the color.Selecting Saturation changes the strength of the color in the image; the setting choice is simply for less or more color strength. In Figure 6.3, I'm adjusting the saturation of this photo. Remember that you can apply the same correction more than once. If, for instance, less saturation still leaves more color in the image than you want, reduce the saturation again to get even less. Figure 6.3. Less saturation gives you a duller image. More saturation gives you a more intense one. (Don't confuse saturation with brightness. Saturation changes the amount of color. Brightness adds light.)[View full size image] ![]()
Saving and Loading CorrectionsTwo other buttons appear in this dialog box, and in the other adjustment dialog boxes as well. These are the Load and Save buttons. They can save you a lot of time and effort if you have a whole series of pictures that need the same kind of corrections. Perhaps you used your digital camera to shoot several outdoor pictures with the same lousy light conditions. Maybe your scanner tends to make everything a little more yellow than you want. After you determine the settings that correct one picture perfectly, you can save those settings and then load them each time you want to apply them to another picture.Click the Save button, and you'll see a typical dialog box that asks you to give your settings a name. You might call them foggy day fix or scanner correction. Then, when you need to apply them to another picture, use the Load button to locate and open the appropriate setting file, and your corrections will be made when you click OK in the dialog box. |