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Using Curves to Color Match

Lesson 20 from: Creating Your Reality with Composite Photography

Renée Robyn

Using Curves to Color Match

Lesson 20 from: Creating Your Reality with Composite Photography

Renée Robyn

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Lesson Info

20. Using Curves to Color Match

Lessons

Class Trailer
1

Class Introduction

09:16
2

Why You Should Sketch Your Composite

03:25
3

What to Look for in Your Background

10:51
4

Posing Your Model

08:23
5

Communicate with Your Team

10:34
6

Elements of Compositing

31:36
7

Learning from Failure & Criticism

12:27
8

On-Location Safety Tips

03:42
9

How to Nail the Right Perspective for Your Composite Photo

07:15
10

Gauging Light & Exposure On-Location

03:49
11

On-Location Posing

18:37
12

Cliff Shoot Location Final Thoughts

12:03
13

Tips for Culling Images

09:41
14

Culling Images Q&A

11:29
15

Preparing Your Image for Composite

07:18
16

Composite Image Cleanup

11:01
17

Adding Background Image to Composite

17:04
18

The Difference Between Flow & Opacity

05:41
19

Composite Sky Elements

20:58
20

Using Curves to Color Match

05:43
21

Adding Atmospheric Depth to Image

17:08
22

Using Color Efex Pro to Manipulate Color

07:37
23

Using the Liquify Tool

05:15
24

Color Theory & Monitor Calibration

10:35
25

Adding Smoke Layer to Image

07:55
26

Selective Sharpening

05:18
27

Crop Your Image

02:29
28

Goal Setting for Digital Artists

04:39
29

Review of Location Composite

01:57
30

Understand Angle & Height for Your Base Plate Image

06:15
31

Base Plate Focus Point

04:45
32

Base Plate Lighting Tips

06:10
33

How to Use a Stand-In for Base Plate Image

03:47
34

Capture On-Location Base Plate Image

05:57
35

Student Positioning Demo

09:05
36

Base Plate Sketching

07:33
37

On-Location Sky Capture

01:53
38

What to Look for in a Base Plate Model

14:30
39

Building Composite Model Lighting

10:03
40

Composite Model Test Shots for Angle Matching

19:48
41

Composite Model Shoot: The Art of Fabric Throwing

13:34
42

Composite Model Shoot: Working with Hair

05:45
43

Composite Model Shoot: Posing Techniques

21:26
44

Composite Test with Final Shot

06:12
45

Lighting Setup Overview

04:52
46

Culling Model Shoot Images

03:35
47

Adjusting Skintone Colors

04:54
48

Merging Background with Model

04:54
49

How to Mask Hair

09:49
50

Creating a Layer Mask with the Brush Tool

14:23
51

Creating Shadow Layers

07:10
52

Removing Visual Distractions with Stamp Tool

07:11
53

Replacing Sky with Layer Mask

05:15
54

Drawing Hair Strands and Atmospheric Depth

10:30
55

Creating Contrast in Your Composite

12:23
56

Adding Atmospheric Elements

06:43
57

Using Particle Shop

11:47
58

Selective Color Adjustments

07:58
59

Cropping, Sharpening, & Final Touches

10:29
60

Closing Thoughts

05:52

Lesson Info

Using Curves to Color Match

Alrighty so we are going to play with color right now and we're gonna play with color a fair bit but right now, one of the things I want to correct is the inconsistency of color between my background, and my foreground, and everything like that. So she is a little bit too tungsten for me compared to what's going on around her. One thing that I noticed is that things that are further away tend to get a little bit more daylight balance and actually this mist mountain range is a perfect example of that. So see here, that mountain range here is nice and tungsten, it's fading off to the stuff that's further away; there's a little bit more daylight. So you'll see this a lot in cinematic stuff. I'm not gonna make this that extreme of course but I like to kind of blend things in a little bit smoother. So I do think that in Capture One I might've been a little bit trigger happy on some of the saturation adjustments which happens sometimes. So what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna turn off these two la...

yers so I'm gonna move back to here, and I'm gonna select this part of my image here. I'm gonna go Alt + Control + Shift + E or Command + Alt + Shift + E and that's just gonna merge everything up underneath. So what I'm gonna do with this now is I'm gonna create a clipping mask so I'm gonna click here, I'm gonna go to my Curves, but right now if I make a curves adjustment, it's going to affect everything below. But I'm sure I don't need to clip it but for out of good habit I'm gonna hold Alt and I'm gonna click - see that little arrow shows up - so it's only gonna affect this image. So if I had a whole bunch of layers of different stuff then this is gonna make more sense when I make more adjustments to the other layers. But if I'm doing that kind of work when I clip the mask, it's not gonna affect all the things in the shot; actually there's probably a better way that we can demo this so it makes more sense so it's more clear. Let's put a Curves there on top of everything, click, drag, it affects everything. If I clip this to the clouds, it's only affecting my clouds now. So, that's the beauty of a clipping mask but in this case we're gonna use it so that we're adjusting our color balance. So I'm gonna go to blue and I will be totally honest, I'm doing this in a really bright room, my colors are probably not gonna be super accurate but I'm gonna do my best here. So I'm just gonna pull this up, she's looking just a little too tungsten, and that's way too much blue but I can reduce the opacity of that curves adjustment layer, and I can go like okay well you know it's looking not too bad, her skin's looking a little better but the dress looks too blue. But because this is a mask, we can paint that. I might just bring back in a little bit of that yellow, not as much, move the Flow, make it a little smaller; I'm just using a soft brush and I'm just slightly blending that. So you wanna make sure cause just because her skin tone was just a little bit too much for me and so when I adjusted the blue, of course it made it a little too blue so our super specific mask looks like that. (chuckles) Sometimes if you don't need a perfect mask, don't make one (laughs). Perfect masks count for lots of things but sometimes they just don't matter. The sky I think I'm gonna add just a little bit of blue tone to it but just a tiny, tiny little bit. Gonna go to my blue channel, I'm just gonna play with it just a little bit and so that, even just that tiny little bit is almost too much right? See that's too much in my opinion anyways but once again, if you make it a little bit too much, it is a clipping mask, I can turn down the opacity of that layer so that it makes just the tiniest little bit of adjustment, and the devil is in the details right? So, we're getting a little bit more cohesive color, it's looking a little bit more realistic, we're going through here, we're looking at these greens here and these greens here, and they're not too bad. These are a little bit too hypersaturated for my flavor so I might make another clipping mask and I'll go Hue Saturation, hold Alt + Click, there we go, click on Hue Saturation there, and then I might go to my greens, and let's just slide down the saturation a little bit on the greens. So let's see, I wanna make sure I'm actually adjusting anything which nothing's happening right now; let's try a different color. And this is kinda what happens, sometimes things just screw up - there we go. So now when we push it all the way we can see what's going on. So I want to reduce the saturation just a tiny, tiny, tiny little bit; minus three. So let's look at this, let's see how we're doing. That's before and after, and the difference is really, really small, and that's totally fine with me. Okay so if we turn on and off our curves adjustments, and our saturation adjustments, we look like that, and like that to that. Very, very, very subtle adjustments. It's just lots of subtle adjustments.

Class Materials

Bonus Materials with Purchase

Texture Sample Pack
Layered Beach PSD Composite
Layered Cliff PSD Composite

Ratings and Reviews

Dino Maez
 

i have to say, the class was AMAZING! in every way from the tricks and technique's of mastering this art form to the personalized attention given by Renee. through the class you are able to learn information that would normally take the average person years of trial and error. Renee gives you the gift of benefitting from her her experiences and what she has learned THE HARD WAY! Renee is an outstanding instructor full of passion for what she does, and with a strong desire to not only improve the art, but more importantly, pay it forward, by sharing her knowledge with others. I was fortunate enough to be able to attend the event in person, truly a once in a lifetime experience for me, the staff at creative live were THE BEST! they are helpful in every way and really made this event something special, i can't say enough about the experience i had and would highly recommend that anyone who has the opportunity to go down for a class, it will be an experience that you will never forget. but the best part of creative live is that wether you are there in person or wether you are watching from the comfort of your own home, you are involved in the class in REAL TIME, you have the ear and attention of the skilled artist giving the instruction, being there myself i can tell you that Renee was regularly given questions and comments from the viewers via the creative live staff and she would respond to them as they came, in that way you are very much apart of the class you are never left without getting that personalized attention of an amazing artist or that specific question you have answered, and even better you have the option to purchase the class and have it as a constant resource in your tool kit that you can refer back to at any point that you need a refresher or want to recall that special technique that was demonstrated. thank you thank you to renee and all the staff at creative live you have a life long member in me. and i would recomend that everyone take advantage of this valuable resource dino maez

stephen lenman
 

I have completed many creative courses. This is by far the best so far. Quite the most amazing and inspiring presenter with a true passion for their craft. The core information is excellent, but the thing i liked most were her subtle tangents, dropping incredible information completely on the fly. A complete real world honest view of business and practical side of the industry. Especially her advice on how she started to her business. Saving up enough in her day job so she could pay the rent, and do photography for 3-6 months.

Sheldon Carvalho
 

Awesome class. I've been following Renee for a very long time. I love her work and to finally see her work and get an image done from start to finish was quite something.. I love the way she sees things and the way she treats her work and all fellow creative. I would recommend this to everyone interested in getting into composting. Looking forward to creating and making my own art work. But it now :) Have fun creating. :)

Student Work

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