I love floating neutrals! What a fantastic feature ;D
Again, as suggested I had at this both in RGB and Lab. This time around I really liked the RGB correction. I used plenty of hue clocks to help me pinpoint my two neutral points, and though I couldn't neutralise the stone I did get it neutral in the Lab a channel everywhere I measured, and slightly warm in the b channel - which made sense given the sunlight...
Having used the floating neutrals feature to set more shape into the image, I applied the adjustments, and returned to Photoshop. In Photoshop I took the image into Lab and painted (onto a layer set to color mode) on the blown out pillars in the foreground, and finished with a bit of sharpening.
Again, I'm off to check the solutions now ;)
Apologies for posting these two images late, but as I said, I didn't want to let them slide. And I'm glad I didn't - I wouldn't have learnt about floating neutrals otherwise :)
Cheers,
Lee.
Week 2: Exercise 8 - Temple
-
- Posts: 263
- Joined: Tue Aug 20, 2013 2:39 pm
- Attachments
-
- wk2_ex8_lh-jpg (999 Bytes) Viewed 5604 times
-
- rgb_lh-acv-4
- (999 Bytes) Not downloaded yet
-
- lab_lh-acv-5
- (999 Bytes) Not downloaded yet
-
- Posts: 263
- Joined: Tue Aug 20, 2013 2:39 pm
Only thing I can see I would change is going after the staircase in the dark shadow.
Do you mean that the stairwell is too dark, or that you would have clipped the shadows more aggressively?
One thing that I picked up from the solution video was that - because I was working in RGB - I should have pinned the shadow rather than simply pull in the shadow threshold. I will go back and do that, and can attend to the stairwell when I do.
Thanks for the advice :)
Lee.
Return to “Curvemeister 101 June 2010”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests