An important stage of this project is the overall "look" of the photos.
In digital photography, you can create it on session or with post production in Photoshop. Because we wanted to young dancers to feel free, we decided not to overwhelm them with a lot of photo gear. This made us work with natural light only and shifted the creation of the "look" to the computer.
Let's roll...
In this step-by-step Photoshop tutorial, I will go through the essentials of creating your unique appearance of your photos.
Step #1 - Crop
I decided to use a ratio of 4/5. The camera's 2/3 felt to "stretched" this time:
Step #2 - Fix White Balance
Pick up the White Balance tool (1) and click in a neutral shadow to neutralize the white balance of the photo (2):
You can monitor the area you click on by checking the RGB values (3). If they are almost equal, it is a neutral area. Once you click on this spot, they will become equal.
Step #3 - Choose the Color Profile
This is a very important step. The color profile you choose, determines the way Photoshop (or Lightroom) renders the colors of the image. This is prior to any manipulations you will do further on.
In this case I chose the Pentax K200D profile for Canon 40D. This is possible when you use PSKiss Cross Camera Color DNG Profiles. This particular profile is helpful when you need to use as much dynamic range as possible with mild initial contrast and it doesn't increase saturation.
Switch to the Camera Calibration tab:
From the Camera Profile menu (Profile menu if you use Lightroom), choose Pentax K200D (this is available only if you have Cross Camera Color profile pack for your camera):
Step #4 - Setup the Basics
This might seem a little strange to some of you. Going to the Basic tab in step 4? Yes. No mistake. All the previous steps effect the basics of the image quite dramatically, so I adress them again only after I went through the first 3 steps.
Here's a little productive tip about the Basic tab. If you are not sure what to do with the Exposure and the Blacks sliders, hold down the Alt/Option key and click on each one them (one at a time...).
This will show you quickly where are the burned out and the totally black areas.
This is how it looks when checking the Exposure of this photo:
This shows that only the background is totally burned out so it is perfectly safe to open up the Exposure. I stopped at +1.00 EV:
Now it's time for the Blacks. Hold down the Alt/Option and check the Blacs:
This shows that nothing is totally black. This time I pushed it up to 7. I don't want this image to be too dark in the shadows:
That's it for this one. In many cases I would do more in this tab, but this time is a bit different...
Step #5 - Open as Smart Object
This is one of my favorites workflow techniques in Photoshop because it allows me to go back to ACR when ever I want to. This keeps me working from the Raw data instead of manipulating final pixels. Better quality and much easier to handle. It always remembers what you've done. I love it...
Click on the Workflow Options line at the bottom of the ACR window:
Mark this option in the pop-up window:
Click OK and the click Open Object:
Step #6 - Duplicate the Smart Object
In Photoshop, go to the Layers panel, right-click under the layer's name and duplicate the Smart object using this command (do not duplicate it as if it was a regular layer. It isn't!):
The result:
Step #7 - Create a Tone Map
The final "look" of this image will be created by using a grayscale version of this photo, blended with the colored version.
To create a grayscale version, simply double-click the duplicated Smart Objects (the top layer).
This will open ACR window again. Go to the HSL tab, convert to Grayscale (change the luminosity of the colors until you get the image you want):
To add some "spice" to this look, I switched to the Effects tab, added some Grain and a soft Vignette and clicked OK:
Step #8 - The Final Touch
For the final touch, I changed the blend mode of the B&W layer to Soft Light and lowered the opacity to 60%:
The first color developed image:
The final image:
The Closing Tip
If you want to apply these develop settings to more images (of the same session or any other), simply save the settings of each develop stage:
Don't forget to name it wisely so you will be able to figure out what it does in the future...
For more information about Cross Camer Color profiles for Photoshop, Lightroom and Elements, Click Here.
I decided to use a ratio of 4/5. The camera's 2/3 felt to "stretched" this time:
Step #2 - Fix White Balance
Pick up the White Balance tool (1) and click in a neutral shadow to neutralize the white balance of the photo (2):
You can monitor the area you click on by checking the RGB values (3). If they are almost equal, it is a neutral area. Once you click on this spot, they will become equal.
Step #3 - Choose the Color Profile
This is a very important step. The color profile you choose, determines the way Photoshop (or Lightroom) renders the colors of the image. This is prior to any manipulations you will do further on.
In this case I chose the Pentax K200D profile for Canon 40D. This is possible when you use PSKiss Cross Camera Color DNG Profiles. This particular profile is helpful when you need to use as much dynamic range as possible with mild initial contrast and it doesn't increase saturation.
Switch to the Camera Calibration tab:
From the Camera Profile menu (Profile menu if you use Lightroom), choose Pentax K200D (this is available only if you have Cross Camera Color profile pack for your camera):
Step #4 - Setup the Basics
This might seem a little strange to some of you. Going to the Basic tab in step 4? Yes. No mistake. All the previous steps effect the basics of the image quite dramatically, so I adress them again only after I went through the first 3 steps.
Here's a little productive tip about the Basic tab. If you are not sure what to do with the Exposure and the Blacks sliders, hold down the Alt/Option key and click on each one them (one at a time...).
This will show you quickly where are the burned out and the totally black areas.
This is how it looks when checking the Exposure of this photo:
This shows that only the background is totally burned out so it is perfectly safe to open up the Exposure. I stopped at +1.00 EV:
Now it's time for the Blacks. Hold down the Alt/Option and check the Blacs:
This shows that nothing is totally black. This time I pushed it up to 7. I don't want this image to be too dark in the shadows:
That's it for this one. In many cases I would do more in this tab, but this time is a bit different...
Step #5 - Open as Smart Object
This is one of my favorites workflow techniques in Photoshop because it allows me to go back to ACR when ever I want to. This keeps me working from the Raw data instead of manipulating final pixels. Better quality and much easier to handle. It always remembers what you've done. I love it...
Click on the Workflow Options line at the bottom of the ACR window:
Mark this option in the pop-up window:
Click OK and the click Open Object:
Step #6 - Duplicate the Smart Object
In Photoshop, go to the Layers panel, right-click under the layer's name and duplicate the Smart object using this command (do not duplicate it as if it was a regular layer. It isn't!):
The result:
Step #7 - Create a Tone Map
The final "look" of this image will be created by using a grayscale version of this photo, blended with the colored version.
To create a grayscale version, simply double-click the duplicated Smart Objects (the top layer).
This will open ACR window again. Go to the HSL tab, convert to Grayscale (change the luminosity of the colors until you get the image you want):
To add some "spice" to this look, I switched to the Effects tab, added some Grain and a soft Vignette and clicked OK:
Step #8 - The Final Touch
For the final touch, I changed the blend mode of the B&W layer to Soft Light and lowered the opacity to 60%:
The first color developed image:
The final image:
The Closing Tip
If you want to apply these develop settings to more images (of the same session or any other), simply save the settings of each develop stage:
Don't forget to name it wisely so you will be able to figure out what it does in the future...
For more information about Cross Camer Color profiles for Photoshop, Lightroom and Elements, Click Here.
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