
Level and Colour adjustment.
Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Levels ((or simply press Ctrl + L). This creates an adjustment layer above your background layer and opens your levels palette. Now we know from when we looked at the RAW image there are some areas that are being clipped, so it would be useful to see them while we make the level adjustment. Looking at the graph we have a gap on the right which we would like to close, but will this cause more clipping? The way I do this is to hold the Alt button down then, as I grab the right slider, the image will go black and the clipped areas will become bright. I want to adjust the slider until I get a balance of closing the gap and not overexposing any more of the airframe. This graph is about right for me but I can come back and adjust it later if I want.
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Next I want to add a touch of saturation. For this I use the menus to go to: Layer
> New Adjustment Layer > Hue/Saturation Now I want to make the dark areas slightly lighter but keep the bright areas as they are. This is a great action to have and once you have recorded it you will use it a lot!. Ok here we go… 1. Select your background
layer on your layer palette Select > Inverse Now our adjustment will
be made to the dark areas and the bright areas will not be affected.
This is non-destructive as you can not blow out any area through
the mask. We should now have a screen like this |
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I am happy with this for the moment so I will select OK. Now all I think the image needs is a touch of contrast. You could make an ‘S’ curve to add contrast, but with CS3 the contrast function itself is very good, so I just use that on an adjustment layer of its own. So just select Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Brightness/Contrast Here
I will add a value of +10 contrast and select OK.
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I can make an adjustment to any layer I want now just by double clicking on the adjustment layer I want to change. If you click the eye next to any other layer or group you can toggle the view of that layer or group. When I am happy with all my adjustments I might want to save this image as a psd file – this allows me to save all the layer detail. For now I am going to carry on to get my image ready for the internet. So next I will merge all the layers back to one single layer: Layer > Flatten Image Check all three tick boxes bottom left are ticked. I use ‘Bicubic Sharper’ - this is the algorithm used in the size reduction. Change the Width to 1200 and press OK.
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Now I have an image almost ready. All that is left to do is sharpen the image.
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