Here Bob explains how to creatively use exposure adjustment layers to add highlights and subtle lighting effects to your photos. This feature was originally implemented in the CS3 version of Adobe Photoshop. Amazingly what he describes as “subtlety” here makes an incredible improvement over the original image. If you enjoy this tutorial, click the tutorials category to the right of this post for more creative digital goodness.
Posts Tagged ‘cs3’
Ever take a nice outdoor photo or landscape and wonder, “Gee what happened to that nice blue sky there was on that day?” Well, a lot of time depending on the direction of the light and your exposure, the sky will become blown out. You might lose a lot of cloud detail, and a lot of the deep blue color you remembered from that day. Check out this quick and easy Photoshop technique using simple selections and an addition sky images, for “digital Photoshoptic surgery”.
Blown out skies ruin a lot of good photos – don’t worry, they’re very easy to fix in Photoshop in under 5 minutes.
Photoshop Tutorial: Fix That Blown Out Sky
Author: ArenaCreative.com | Filed under: Creative Workflow, Graphic Design, Photography, TutorialsThe dodge tool set to “highlights” is mind blowingly helpful when it comes to shooting white seamless, or objects over white. It’s always better to get it right in the camera or in the studio, but sometimes that doesn’t always happen. Here is an older Photoshop tutorial I thought I’d resurrect from the dead today. It shows you how you can quickly and easily clean up your photos shot over white or light gray by using the dodge tool in Adobe Photoshop. This allows you to avoid having to tweak levels, make an actual selection or use masking.




