Fall Color Photography is fun, excellent, in fact! There is nothing better than getting out there with your camera and showcasing the glory of all that yellow, orange, and red goodness in the tapestry of trees. What could be better, right?
The problems with Fall photography don’t usually hit us until we get home to process our photos. I don’t know about you, but I find that the Raw Files don’t do the scene justice. They usually appear, drab, washed out, and not quite as life-giving as the photographed scene.
In today’s video, I will share three tips for making the colors in your Raw images pop off the screen.
Blake. Thank you. Really. And my Calibration dropdown is now below my Basics tab. I will use it. I am a slave to the Color Mixer. It is my friend.
Your tutorials are as good as they get.
BUT, and this is about as trivial a critique as you will ever get, think about another word (or maybe phrase) that will reduce (not eliminate) the word “pop”. EVERYONE uses it and it is becoming silly and trite.
I will say again, you are a guiding light in my workflow (another word that’s becoming over used) and I have run out of words. All the best
Hi Blake – your videos are fantastic – thank you for the 3 tips on editing fall colors. Question: My version of LR Classic doesn’t have a ‘Color Mixer’ module. Is ‘HSL/Color’ in the Develop Module the same as ‘Color Mixer’?
Awesome tips, Blake! Wow!
Good one Blake ???
Well, another superbly done video.
I’ve been doing photography and photoshop/adobe raw editing for over 13 years, and every time I listen to one of your tutorial I learn something new. Thank you!
HI Blake I always get excited to see more of your tutorials. I do have one question. When the shadows had a lot of blue, your went to the color mixer. Would another way to take care of that, like going to the calibration section and reduce the blue?
Great tips! Thank you Blake!