Thank you for advising. I find it amazing that you know just how much I'm able to raise my black point with specific numbers that work (I tried both). I decided to tackle this today.
Here are the histograms as large as I can get them, cropped in... And my edit with the raised black point, slight S curve, curves to lighten the shadows on the bear a wee bit (perhaps not necessary), black vignette, and a little warmer. I had to start from scratch because I reset my raw file to get the original histogram to display here.
Unprocessed Histogram
Processed histogram
New Edit
Thank you Mike!
Very nice shooting. I like the first one best. You made the most of a good photo op.![]()
Christina, I really love all of these, however #2 is my favorite, followed by the cub in the tree! The bear in #2 has an expression like he is in wonderland!As a child my favorite book was "Cubby in Wonderland" about a cub in Yellowstone Park!
The bird image is really great, also!
Well done, indeed!
They are nice but the first one with colourful surroundings looks especially nice Christina![]()
You got rid of the gauze, Christina! Well done!
From now on, make sure you always do the same by setting your black and white points and then by adjusting the curve to address mid-tone contrast. Always keep an eye on the histogram and once you set the black point, make sure that it doesn't change throughout your post-processing unless you have a very specific reason to change it.
Last edited by Mike Buckley; 1st September 2014 at 10:23 PM.
The first image is such a nice composition, but it has always bothered me that there is a strong magenta color cast. So, I changed it and liked it so much I continued to work with it as shown below.
- Adjusted the color cast by adding some green and yellow
- The above step took the histogram away from the left side a bit, so I raised the black point slightly to return the histogram to the left side.
- Selected the bears and applied a reserve S-Curve to increase the detail
- Applied Local Contrast Enhancement only to the bears to increase the detail some more
- Selected the brownish foliage and darkened it
- Selected the bright, dead tree the bears are walking on and darkened the bright tones.
- Added a slight vignette (I bet you don't even see it, which is ideal.)
Thank you Steve, Binnur and Carol. Truly appreciated.
Carol... Berry Wonderland.
A very special thank you to Mike!
I will follow your PP guidelines from now on. I didn't see the magenta cast and I wish I could see such things. The only colour adjustments I made were to warm up the WB +200 and increase vibrance +20. Nor did I see the mist. I thought it was just noise (ISO 3200)
I adore your post processing of this image and I will give it a try, later today. Thank you!
I have seldom seen such a dearly pretty image of a bird like this...my heart goes to that again and again....![]()
I used the color balance function because fine tuning the color is easier done using that part of my software than adjusting the white balance. However, the same results probably could have been accomplished adjusting the white balance whether using temperature and tint sliders or using a neutral color picker. One reason I got used to using the color balance capability is that, unlike white balance adjustments, it can be applied selectively to part of an image.
The magenta color cast could have also been eliminated using the neutral color picker built into my Levels & Curve tool. I didn't try doing that because I knew it would be relatively easy to use the color balance sliders.
Lots of ways to accomplish the same results!
The color cast is gone. Good job! I like everything else that you did but the color cast was the most important issue. I don't detect the vignette, which is to my taste.