Curves for Color
Ben Willmore
Lessons
Introduction To Adobe Photoshop
04:05 2Bridge vs. Lightroom
06:39 3Tour of Photoshop Interface
18:21 4Overview of Bridge Workspace
07:42 5Overview of Lightroom Workspace
11:21 6Lightroom Preferences - Saving Documents
08:19 7How To Use Camera Raw in Adobe Photoshop 2020
05:10 8Overview of Basic Adjustment Sliders
13:09Developing Raw Images
30:33 10Editing with the Effects and HLS Tabs
09:12 11How to Save Images
03:37 12Using the Transform Tool
04:48 13Making Selections in Adobe Photoshop 2020
06:03 14Selection Tools
05:55 15Combining Selection Tools
07:37 16Using Automated Selection Tools
17:34 17Quick Mask Mode
05:07 18Select Menu Essentials
21:28 19Using Layers in Adobe Photoshop 2020
13:00 20Align Active Layers
07:29 21Creating a New Layer
06:15 22Creating a Clipping Mask
03:02 23Using Effects on Layers
11:24 24Using Adjustment Layers
16:44 25Using the Shape Tool
04:39 26Create a Layer Mask Using the Selection Tool
04:39 27Masking Multiple Images Together
15:15 28Using Layer Masks to Remove People
10:50 29Using Layer Masks to Replace Sky
10:04 30Adding Texture to Images
09:11 31Layering to Create Realistic Depth
05:35 32Adjustment Layers in Adobe Photoshop 2020
05:29 33Optimizing Grayscale with Levels
10:59 34Adjusting Levels with a Histogram
03:37 35Understanding Curves
06:18 36Editing an Image Using Curves
18:41 37Editing with Shadows/Highlights Adjustment
07:19 38Dodge and Burn Using Quick Mask Mode
07:14 39Editing with Blending Modes
08:04 40Color Theory
05:59 41Curves for Color
16:52 42Hue and Saturation Adjustments
08:59 43Isolating Colors Using Hue/Saturation Adjustment
13:33 44Match Colors Using Numbers
16:59 45Adjusting Skin Tones
05:25 46Retouching Essentials In Adobe Camera Raw
10:52 47Retouching with the Spot Healing Brush
07:53 48Retouching with the Clone Stamp
06:51 49Retouching with the Healing Brush
04:34 50Retouching Using Multiple Retouching Tools
13:07 51Extending an Edge with Content Aware
03:42 52Clone Between Documents
13:19 53Crop Tool
10:07 54Frame Tool
02:59 55Eye Dropper and Color Sampler Tools
08:14 56Paint Brush Tools
13:33 57History Brush Tool
06:27 58Eraser and Gradient Tools
03:06 59Brush Flow and Opacity Settings
04:17 60Blur and Shape Tools
11:06 61Dissolve Mode
09:24 62Multiply Mode
15:29 63Screen Mode
14:08 64Hard Light Mode
14:54 65Hue, Saturation, and Color Modes
11:31 66Smart Filters
11:32 67High Pass Filter
13:40 68Blur Filter
05:59 69Filter Gallery
07:42 70Adaptive Wide Angle Filter
04:43 71Combing Filters and Features
04:45 72Select and Mask
20:04 73Manually Select and Mask
08:08 74Creating a Clean Background
21:19 75Changing the Background
13:34 76Smart Object Overview
08:37 77Nested Smart Objects
09:55 78Scale and Warp Smart Objects
09:08 79Replace Contents
06:55 80Raw Smart Objects
10:20 81Multiple Instances of a Smart Object
12:59 82Creating a Mockup Using Smart Objects
05:42 83Panoramas
13:15 84HDR
11:20 85Focus Stacking
04:02 86Time-lapse
11:18 87Light Painting Composite
08:05 88Remove Moire Patterns
06:11 89Remove Similar Objects At Once
09:52 90Remove Objects Across an Entire Image
05:46 91Replace a Repeating Pattern
06:50 92Clone from Multiple Areas Using the Clone Source Panel
10:27 93Remove an Object with a Complex Background
07:49 94Frequency Separation to Remove Staining and Blemishes
12:27 95Warping
11:03 96Liquify
14:02 97Puppet Warp
12:52 98Displacement Map
10:36 99Polar Coordinates
07:19 100Organize Your Layers
11:02 101Layer Styles: Bevel and Emboss
02:59 102Layer Style: Knockout Deep
12:34 103Blending Options: Blend if
13:18 104Blending Options: Colorize Black and White Image
06:27 105Layer Comps
08:30 106Black-Only Shadows
06:07 107Create a Content Aware Fill Action
08:46 108Create a Desaturate Edges Action
07:42 109Create an Antique Color Action
13:52 110Create a Contour Map Action
10:20 111Faux Sunset Action
07:20 112Photo Credit Action
05:54 113Create Sharable Actions
07:31 114Common Troubleshooting Issues Part 1
10:23 115Common Troubleshooting Issues Part 2
07:57 116Image Compatibility with Lightroom
03:29 117Scratch Disk Is Full
06:02 118Preview Thumbnail
02:10Lesson Info
Curves for Color
all right. Now, let's take a look at some examples of warm, cool adjustments. The one that I use the most is called curves, and that's because curves offers you the most control over what you're doing. In fact, most all of the other warm, cool adjustments are really using curves behind the scenes, and they're just not giving you all the power that curves could use. Instead, they're trying to simplify what it's presenting like when using color bounce. But we could do everything that color balance could do and just do it right here and curves. Any time you see me use curbs, you're gonna find that the subtle icon that looks like a hand it's always turned on. Its got a dark background that indicates it's turned on. And that's because I've gone to the upper right where there's a little menu and curves and there's a choice called Auto Select Targeted Adjustment Tool, and I have that turned on, and I'd suggest you turn it on. What that does is it makes it so. Every single time you access curv...
es, that little hand icon will be turned on. If the hand is not turned on, then If you move your mouse onto your image, you'll be using whatever tool you last used in your tools panel, like the paint brush tool or the hand tool or whatever it waas. But if that hand icons turned on when you move your mouse on top of your picture, it's going to think about curves. And that's what I needed to dio. So let's take a brief look at curves in curbs. If this menu is set to RGB, then I'm going to try to be just making brightness changes to my picture. And that's true, not just of curves but any adjustment that has the choice of RGB and then individually red, green and blue. That means things like Levels offers the same control in It'll work the same way. So that sets RGB and I click on my picture. I'm gonna try to darken or brighten the picture, but the colors shouldn't shift around. If, on the other hand, I changed that menu to read. Now I'm only counting controlling the amount of red light that the image is made out of. So if I click with him, my picture and I push up, I'm gonna brighten my picture because we're adding light, but I'm adding red light, so it should become more red. If I end up switching it to green and I move it up, I'm gonna make it brighter and use green light to do that with. So it becomes more green. If I switch it to blue and move it up, it's gonna make it brighter. And we're using blue light, so it becomes more blue. But those same three colors have opposites, so if I use less red, it's a Ziff. I used the opposite color of red to absorb it. The opposite of red if I look in my info panel, is science. So if I move this down, I'm using less and less red. And that's really making more and more of its opposite appear, which is science. I come hitter to green groups, get to the right color. I look in the info palette to see what the opposite of green is magenta. So when I pull this down to use less green, it becomes Maura of the opposite. I can't even see the dot in there to get rid of it and then blew the opposite of blue If you look in the info, Palin is yellow. And so if I click here and moved down, less blue really means more young. So any adjustment that offers a pop up menu that default so rgb, But when you click on it has a choice of red, green and blue. Those air warm, cool adjustments in moving something one way will make things warmer. Moving in the opposite way will make it cooler, so that's one type of adjustment. That type of adjustment is useful when you have a picture that has a color caste like this one. That image to me looks like it has too much blue and maybe too much green. And if so, I want to use a warm, cool adjustment, and I want to see if I can lessen the amount of each of those colors. So here I'll do a curves adjustment layer and let's say I think there's too much blue in there, so I set this to blue. I move my mouse on top of the image to an area where it looks like it has an excess of blue, and I dragged down down and once I dio I noticed that now the image feels like it has an excess of green. That means it really had an excess of both, so I could set this to green. Now click on an area that looks to be to green, and I could drag it down. And if I was able to do that, I might be able to get this image toe look better. Might need a little less blue as well. But right now I'm just trusting my screen, my eyes in just my guessing as to what color I think I'm seeing too much of. There's a way to get Photoshopped to figure it out for us. I'm gonna throw away this adjustment layer and let's see what we can do. Well, there's a general concept that could be helpful, and let's take a look at it by clicking on my foreground color and getting to the color picker. If I pick a color in here, you'll find the numbers on the right side changing those air formulas for how you could describe the color that I currently have so describe this particular green color I could get on the phone with somebody, and if I just said its vivid green. Do you think they'd be able to know what color I'm looking at? Probably not. They'll have some idea the category it would be in, but not the exact color. If, on the other hand, I told them to click on their foreground color, so they saw the same screen, and I told them to type in any one of these sets of numbers. Either the three numbers that make up HSB, the three numbers that make up RGB or the three numbers that make up L. A. B or the four for C M Y que. They'd be able to see the same color, although I shouldn't quite say that is not true for seeing like a This color is too vivid to be described with that, but it's a precise way of describing a color. The numbers don't usually mean anything to you, necessarily unless you've used them for decades, but they're very useful. So let's learn just a little bit about those numbers in. Since we're gonna be working with adjustments that offer the choices of red, green and blue, we're gonna look at those numbers RGB numbers. So what I'm gonna do here is, I'm gonna choose a shade of gray over here on the left side. These are all shades of gray, and when I choose these different shades of gray, keep an eye at the numbers that show up on the right side of my screen. Just the RGB numbers and see if you can learn anything about them. Here I'll choose a dark shade of gray. I'll choose ah, medium shade of gray. What? She was a bright shade of gray, and you should learn something about it because you'll notice that all of the shades of grey have a balanced amount of red, green and blue. Red, green, blue are exactly the same. If there ever not exactly the same, then it's not a shade of gray. So if I choose any color, it doesn't matter how melo the color is. When you look at the RGB numbers, you find that they vary. So when red, green and blue are in perfect balance, you have a shade of gray. Whenever they get out of balance, you have a color. If red is above the others, its a reddish color green is above the others. You have a greenish color and so on. If you just knew that, then there'd be a chance you could figure out how to color. Correct a picture. The key to color correcting a picture is to find areas that should be a shade of gray and then looking at them with those numbers to see if their balanced. And if they're not balanced. It's not a shade of gray, and therefore you have an excess of some color that shouldn't be there. And that's what a color caste iss. So here I have, ah, coffee mug, which is a white mug. So as long as there's not a coffee stain on the outside of it, where it would be brownish if I were to take a picture that included this mug and I move my mouse on top of it, I could look in the info panel and it would tell me exactly how much red, green and blue is in the mug. And if it wasn't balanced, then there would be too much of some color in the image. Whatever color is above the average that's there. Same with these little dangles that connect my computer toe, various cables there white. That's a shade of gray shouldn't have any color in them. Same with the metal that's around this screen that's near me. It's made out of aluminum, and it's gray. I don't think it's Ah, reddish or bluish or any other color, and therefore those numbers should be equal. Well, what happens is as you take any color, then you take it to its extreme of brightness. If you look in a color picker, let's say you look at red. You're thinking about a red apple. For instance, if you look at the brightest highlight on a red apple, it's not read, even if it's a really vividly red apple in every inch of the apple. Because what happens is in order to be extremely bright, you just can't have any color. So the next time you look at a vividly colored object, especially if it's a shiny one, look at where the highlight ISS, where the light is hitting it the brightest, and you'll find that the color in general usually goes away and you won't be able to just think of this. You gotta look at photos the next time you're watching TV and somebody sets an apple on the table. Watch the highlight. There won't be any colorant, most the time. The same is true for the dark portion of an object. If it's a red apple and you take a picture of it, look at the absolute darkest part of the red apple and there won't be any color showing up. And that's simply because you can't have both an extremely dark area and color at the same time. So what that means is there are two special areas in a photograph that would usually contain no color. And that would be the extremes of brightness, the brightest in the darkest areas. And if we go into either levels or curves, you're gonna find little eye droppers over on the side. You seem right here. One of them would be full of black, one of whom would full of white and one is full of grey. They could be used for color correction. What they're designed to be used for is, you grab the white one, you go into your image and you finally absolute brightest area. That is not what's known as a speculum highlight. A speculum highlight is an area that has absolutely no detail. It's usually the light source itself or a reflection of that life source on something shiny. And so you avoid those you're looking for what they call it diffused highlight, which is just where it's Ah, it's not blown out to solid white. Anyway, I believe that that spot would be approximately here in this image. So I'm gonna click there with white eyedropper. Then I'm gonna grab the black eye dropper, and I'm gonna think about where I think the darkest portion of this image is the absolute darkest little speck in the image. And I'm gonna guesstimate it to be right here, and I'll click there. Then I'm gonna grab the middle eyedropper, and I'm gonna look for something in the scene that I think should be grey. That means an object I might recognize would be great. These columns might have been gray, and if so, I'm gonna click on it. Did you see what it just did when I did those three eye droppers? Well, what those three eye droppers air doing or using the concept of a balanced amount of red, green and blue makes gray. And what I'm doing is looking through the scene to find areas that I think should be great and usually by default. You can use the brightest area of your picture for one in the darkest area for another, because in order to be an extreme of brightness, you just can't have color there. And then it's mainly the middle one where I'm experimenting. Where if I had a coffee mug in my table, I'd be clicking on it because it's a white mug. Or if I have these little dangles, or if I had my laptop, that's a silver color. It's not bluish or yellowish or anything. Ah, that's what I would use. Now there's a way to find the brightest in darkest parts of our images, so we don't have to guess in this case, I was guessing. So I'm gonna throw away this adjustment layer, and I'll show you how you could do it without guessing. I'll go back into curves and in curves, their little sliders at the bottom. Those sliders do the same thing is the top outer sliders in levels. If you happen to know how levels works and with those sliders, if you hold on the option key, which I have held down right now and you pull this slaughter towards the middle until you see the first part of your image that actually turns white. Not blue, not yellow, not some other color but white. It's telling you where the brightest part of your picture is. So right now I can see a white ish blob near the lower right. And if I like oh, my mouth, I'm just going to stare at it so I can recognize where it is. Okay? It's exactly where I was clicking. Then I'll bring that slider all the way back to its original position, and I'm gonna do the same thing for the opposite slider. Hold down the option key, which is all time windows. Click on it in the drag it towards the metal. In this time, I'm dragging it until I see the first spot that turns solid black into me. It looks like it's on the left side of my wife's hair. I see an area turning black. I'll let go, just like in spare at it and notice where it is. It was right over in here. Then I move this slider back to where it started, So these are at their extremes. Now that tells me where I could click with white eyedropper, where I can click with the black eye dropper and where the middle one it's not going to tell me. I have to look around the scene and I'm looking for things I recognise. That might be a shade of gray. And so I'm don't remember who is my wife's. Ah, outfit here, Grey, Or is it purplish or some other color? If I think there's a possibility it would be gray, I can click on it with the middle eyedropper if the color improves, it was near gray, but then I can experiment and click on another area like What's up here? If I think those might have been gray and just move around until I've tried all the various areas that I think are possibilities of being gray and I end up going back to whatever one gave me the best color. So let's just say it was there. So I'll turn this off and back on again. You see how we can color correct a picture? Well, what if we can give Photoshopped to do that for us? Well, I'm gonna throw away this adjustment layer. Start with a fresh one. And if I go to the side menu and curves, there's a choice in here called auto Options, and we can set up how the button called Auto, which is found in Kurds works. And if I choose this, we have many different choices. Weaken use One is called Find Dark and light colors. That means use the same thing We just used a moment ago to find the brightest in darkest areas. Then it's gonna click on it with the black and white eye droppers. For us. There is a check box here called Snap Neutral mid tones. What that's going to do is it's gonna look through the scene for the area that's closest toe, having a balanced amount of red, green and blue, and it's gonna assume that it should be exactly balanced, which means it's gonna try to find something close to gray and click on it. It's not gonna be anywhere near as good as we could be. And then if I turn on this check boxes save his defaults that it's gonna remember all these settings, I click OK, and now, in the future, if I ever want to color, correct a picture. First off, I would usually do it in adobe camera with white balance adjustment. We talked about that in a lesson that was specific to Adobe Camera, But here we're looking at our options and photo shop. So imagine this is a scanned picture instead of one from a digital camera. But now that I've set that up, all I need to do is have the auto button here, and it will attempt to color correct my picture. And afterwards I can always grab the middle eyedropper in experiment. Just try other places in case it didn't do a great job of picking the best area. And I just click on any object that looks like it should be. A shade of grade shouldn't have any color in it. And I keep going until I find whichever area gives me the most pleasing color
Class Materials
Ratings and Reviews
Noel Ice
I am an avid reader of photoshop books, and an avid watcher of photoshop tutorials. I have attended (internet) several hundred of presentations. In the course of this endeavor, I have found my own favorite photoshop websites and instructors. Creative Live is probably the bargain out there as well as among the top three internet course sites. I have to say with great enthusiasm that the best Photoshop instructor is Ben Willmore. There are many great ones, but truly, he is the best I have come across, and, as indicated above, I have watched literally 100s of tutorials on Photoshop. I have seen all of Ben's courses, I think, and among them, this one is the best by far, and that is saying a lot, because that makes this course the best course on Photoshop to be found anywhere. I am going back and watching it twice. Not only is it comprehensive, but Ben is so familiar with his subject that he is able to explain it like no other. This is crème de la crème of Photoshop classes. I have been wanting to write this review for some time because I have been so thoroughly impressed with everything about this class!
ford smith
Highly recommended if you want to take your Photoshop skills to the next level. Ben Willmore is clear, concise, and professional. He also has a good speaking voice that is not distracting but also keeps you engaged. Lastly, I would recommend that as you become more advanced, increasing the speed of the video (one of the options given on the menu)...especially if you've gone through the course once before and maybe want to watch it again. The double speed is very efficient as you become more advanced in Photoshop. Thanks for the help Ben!
a Creativelive Student
Wow. I cannot communicate the value of this course!! The true value in this course is how the instructor identifies workflows you'll need before you'll ever realize it, repeats important information without it becoming annoying, and explains the "why" behind the techniques so well that even if you forget the exact method, you can figure it out via the principles learned. Excellent value, excellent material, excellent instructor!!!