photo-editing


Brightness And Contrast

In photography, exposure is controlled by a variety of things--the size of the lens opening, the film speed, and the duration the lens remains open taking the picture. In digital photo editing, we can adjust exposure further, with the Brightness and Contrast controls.

Brightness, as the name implies, is the amount of light in the picture. The longer the lens was open and the wider the lens aperture, the brighter the resulting picture will be. Every photo editing program will have a Brightness control. Changing the brightness setting will adjust the colors of the pictures as if the photo was taken with a wider or narrower aperture.

However, increasing the brightness can cause the picture to look washed out. This is where Contrast comes in. Contrast is the range of dark and light in the picture--the spectrum between the darkest and the brightest regions of the picture. Changing the contrast will make the brights brighter and the darks darker, which will counter-balance the changes made by the Brightness control. Brightness and contrast are generally used in tandem in most photo editing projects.

In most projects, it's rare to have a photo that needs overall brightness and contrast adjustments. What's more common is to have a picture that needs adjustments to small areas. For example, a dark cityscape against a bright blue sky, or a portrait with sunlight behind the subject, would likely be ruined by changing the overall brightness and contrast. These pictures need smaller, focused adjustments. In the old darkroom days, the only choice the photographer had was to dodge or burn. With modern photo editing programs, however, he can use a Lasso selection set, and then apply Burn, Dodge, Brightness, Contrast, or even Levels and Curves adjustments, to only those parts of the picture that really need it.

 

 

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Photo Editing

 

 

 

Photo Editing


Red Eye Removal

... the subjects don't know about the pre-flash, there's a chance they'll blink or turn away between flashes because they'll think the picture has now been taken. Once red-eye gets past the camera lens, your only real option is to try to correct it with your photo editing program. Without a program or filter ... 

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Photo Editing Terms 2 - D To I

... photographer's information, like the date and time the picture was taken and the shutter speed and aperture set at the time. Flip Flipping an image is the same as reflecting it in a mirror. Flipping is one of the basic image editing tools. Grayscale Technically speaking, a spectrum of gray shades from ... 

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Megapixels

... not the megapixels of the camera. While a three megapixel image will look great on the computer screen, printed at 3x5, or maybe even printed at 5x7, the dots will be really obvious if the picture is blown up onto a highway billboard. Five megapixels will make for a great 8x10 print. When it comes to ... 

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Burning And Dodging

... area that wasn't masked gets more exposure. Dodging, on the other hand, involves using a small piece of paper or cardboard to block the light from a section of the photograph. Burning, then, means adding extra exposure to some element of the picture, while dodging is less exposure. In general, this is ... 

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Sharpening

... a pixel that's navy blue on one side and sky blue on the other. The camera has to analyze where two colors touch, and then it has to "guess" at what color the dot in between them is really supposed to be. Most of the time, it's going to be some average shade between the two colors. This fools the human ... 

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