The shot I almost didn’t take, Elgol, Scotland

Persistence pays.

Travelling with fellow photographer David Oliver, he wanted to find a stretch of stony beach at Elgol because the surrounding cliffs looked pretty interesting. I was working on a calendar project, so I was also keen, but I wasn’t convinced the weather would be dramatic enough for what I had in mind.

As it turns out, the shot I had in mind wasn’t the photo that I loved. Even more remarkable, I almost didn’t take it!

Elgol is on the Isle of Skye and, being mid-winter, there were very few people around – just the locals and some road workers. As we came into tiny Elgol, the road down to the beach and harbour was blocked by a couple of large trucks effecting maintenance works. There was no way to get around the truck and the workers didn’t seem to be moving anytime soon.

We did what all experienced photographers do and retired to a local café a few hundred metres up the hill. I can remember the wonderful pumpkin soup and the steaming scones and jam, polished off with a cup of tea. It was hard to move back out into the Scottish cold and the weather looked like it was closing in. We wondered if we would even bother going down to the beach.

But something inside us said we should, just in case. After all, we’d come all this way, the food was good, so who knows what we might find!

The photo we had in mind was good, but the breakwater creating a tiny harbour looked more interesting. Walking out to the end of it, I had a great view looking back onto the beach with its small school (it’s not visible in my image). What a great place to be educated!

The breakwater also revealed some grassy fields above the cliffs and movement in the distant clouds was creating some interesting light. This seemed to be the better photograph!

To get the milky water, I used a 4.0 Neutral Density with the 28mm Phase One lens, allowing a 30 second exposure. The 28mm has a very large front element, so it’s not easy to put a filter in front. Instead, there’s a small holder in the back of the lens which takes gelatine filters. Now, gelatine filters are okay, but the 4.0 ND has a slight colour cast to it as you can see in the original file.

I took the file into Capture One and with a couple of clicks using the White Balance picker tool, I had the colour looking pretty natural. I also cropped the image down and lightened it a little.

From here I used the Local Adjustment layers – I love this aspect of Capture One. The first step was to darken down the sky because it is a little bright in the original. Our eyes tend to go to the light parts of the image first, but I didn’t want them to go straight to the sky. Solution: darken it down a tad.

Next I added another Local Adjustment and this time used the Advanced Color Editor to add some blue into the sea. Never mind the sky is still grey, I wanted a blue sea. I know this doesn’t look completely real and I am happy with that.

To take the eye towards the cliffs, I used another Local Adjustment and, again using the Advanced Color Editor, tweaked the grasses. I gave them additional color saturation and contrast. Now the photo looks a little closer to the holiday brochures we had seen!

And for the final image (shown at the beginning of the blog), I added a fourth Local Adjustment, and with a quite large brush dragged it through the middle of the image and lightened this area. It gives the image a little more life by lightening up the middle – where I want the eye to travel.

So, for someone who had eaten too much for lunch, it turned out to be a productive afternoon. No, the photo didn’t run in the calendar, but it was one provided to the client for their short list. No accounting for taste, of course!

Peter Eastway is a professional photographer and photography magazine editor based in Sydney, Australia. To see more of his photography, visit http://www.petereastway.com. Peter also offers an online Landscape Photography MasterClass. Details can be found at http://www.betterphotography.com.

Fixing heavy burn-outs with the Color Editor

A camera with a large dynamic range will allow you to better retain the details in both the shadows and highlights at the same time.

Not all camera manufacturers have realized the importance of having a large dynamic range, and images shot with these cameras are more likely to show clipped highlight details.

When working with a RAW file you do have the possibly to recover some of the clipped highlights details as all three color channels typically do not clip data at the same exposure level.

As you get to know your camera, you will learn how much overexposure an image can handle while it is still possible to recover all details. The benefit of doing this is to get brighter shadows and more headroom to open up the deep shadows without showing noise.

Sometimes, you end up with images where the highlights are too blown out and all attempts to recover the clipped data leads to strange looking colors close to the burned-out areas. Capture One Pro 6’s Color Editor can be the only solution to fix such false colors.

The image above was shot with a camera with a limited dynamic range. To the left, you can see the image straight out of the camera where the highlights are clearly burned out. To the right, you can see the image after the highlights has been recovered and the false colors fixed with the Color Editor.

Capture One’s High Dynamic Range tool is the tool to start with when fixing the burned-out highlights. As the image was shot with a camera with a limited dynamic range, there is very limited headroom for the highlights. I can barely recover the details and I get some false greenish color in the recovered zones.

To fix the false color, I’ll use Capture One’s Advanced Color Editor. I’ll make the correction in an Adjustments Layer as I don’t know for sure whether the false color also appear as a natural part of the image.

1. Add a new adjustments layer in the Adjustments Tool by clicking the ‘+’ icon.

2. Invert the mask as you want to make sure that you work on the whole image while setting up the right parameters for the tool.

3. Pick the false greenish color with the color picker.

4. Adjust the selection by checking the “View selected color range” on.

5. Reduce the Smoothness slider and turn the hue a little towards the green color in order to isolate the false color.

6. Uncheck the “View selected color range” and adjust the hue to a more yellow/brown tone.

7. Invert the mask and brush in the color corrections.

Color Editor – Selecting the right color range

In the Color Editor in Capture One Pro 6 under the Advanced Tab, it is possible to do selective color adjustments.

With the Color Picker, you can pick a color in the image to select the color range you want to work on.

Use the “View selected color range” check box to check that you have actually selected the color range you expected.

Adjust the color range to match exactly the color you want to work on or try to do a new color pick.

On the image to the right, the “View selected color range” check box has been turned on to verify that I have selected all the greens. Once I am satisfied with the selected color range, I turn of the check mark and make my color corrections.

Adjusting the color range for the selected color:

Before starting to adjust a color in the Advanced Color Editor, it is highly advisable to make sure that you have actually selected the right colors.

With the check box “View selected color range” turned on, I use the Color Picker to pick the green stalk of the strawberry in order to select the green colors.

Immediately, I see that I indeed got the color of the stalk but not the color of the leaves.  The color of the stalk is too bluish green, compared to the color of the leaves to be included in the color range of the pick.

Now, I can adjust the color range by dragging on the round handles around the selected color.

In this case, I dragged the handle on the color circle’s periphery. This handle allows me to change the hue of the color range. Here, I made the color selection more yellowish green to include the green hue of the leaves.

I also adjusted the Smoothness slider a bit to allow a wider color selection. The Smoothness slider determines how far into the adjacent colors, the color selections reach.

Be careful when using very low values of smoothness in combination with dramatic color changes as this may lead to sudden unnatural color shifts.

Once satisfied with the color range, turn off the “view selected color range” and do the color corrections.

Highlight a selected color with Inverse Color Selections!

  • You can make Inverse Color Selections in Capture One Pro’s Color Editor Tool under the Advanced tab.
  • Inverse Color Selections can be used to desaturate all but a selected color in a very easy way.
  • Inverse Color Selections can still be combined with normal color selections.

 

Create beautiful and interesting images

 

The image on the left has come straight out of the camera.  The day started with a very clear blue sky, but quickly it became quite hazy and the photos didn’t look very interesting. The image on the right is achieved by working with the Inverse Color Selections which gives the image a more interesting look.

 

A step by step instruction

Isolate the red color:

1)  Use the Color Correction Picker in the Color Editor Tool’s advanced tab to select the red color of the flowers in the foreground.

2)  Click on the Inverse Selection icon to select all but the red color.

3)  Desaturate all but the red color by dragging the Saturation Slider to minus 100.

Enhance the contrast between the sky and the clouds:

4)  Use the Color Correction Picker to pick in the previously blue sky.  Even though the sky is now black and white, the Color Editor still remembers the original color.

5)  Darken the sky by dragging the Lightness Slider to a negative value.

Brighten the color of the flowers:

6)  Use the Color Correction Picker to select the color of the flowers and increase the Saturation and Lightness values to the desired levels.

More power to the Color Editor in Capture One Pro 6

Phase One image professor - tip #11 - Color editor

The Advanced Color Editor in Capture One Pro 6 may look identically to the one in version 5, but the adjustment ranges has been dramatically expanded.
Now you can achieve your desired color corrections often with just a single pick for each color.

Phase One image professor - tip #11 - Color editor

Left image is straight out of the camera. With cold flat early morning winter light hardly any colors show up in this image. Right image is after color correction with the Color Editor ‘s advanced tools.

 

How I did it

Phase One image professor - tip #11 - Color editor

Three color picks has been added to bring back some of the colors and to turn it into a much more interesting picture.

1 Red color pick on the building.  Saturation and Lightness has been increased to bring attention towards the building.

2 Blueish color pick in the clouds.  In order for the sky to stand out and be different from the snow, the Saturation has been increased and the Lightness decreased

3 Dark wood color pick on the fence.  By increasing Saturation and Lightness you bring back the colors of the fence almost as if you have been using a fill-in flash

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