Many of us like to shoot flowers, including myself. Generally, we'll use DOF to bring out the flower against the background and, if possible, use available lighting to further emphasize the bright flower against a darker background. Such was the basis of this shot:
A pretty shot and, with it's visitor, a bit of a keeper. But that light purple is not strongly at the fore, IMHO. Our eyes are more sensitive to green and the leaves in the background to the right of the flower draw my eye, even though they are "darker" than the flower.
Of course, there are many ways to skin this particular cat - but RawTherapee has some pretty comprehensive Lab processing options - so I had a go:
Kapow!!
Please open them in the Lytebox and click back and forth to get a good idea of the change.
Why Lab? The main thing about Lab is that you can adjust the brightness without affecting the color saturation. OTOH, you can adjust the color without messing up the image tones too much. Similar adjustments in the RGB mode are far more interactive, in my experience.
Why RawTherapee? The Lab adjustments include curves in addition to simple sliders; one curve (CH) gives the ability to adjust the saturation** of individual hues without affecting other hues.
** (well, chroma actually, which is not the same as the S in HSB)
So, here's what I did, briefly:
I applied an 'S' shape curve in Lightness to darken the background and lighten up the flower a bit. In so doing, the flower mid-tones gained a bit of contrast.
I increased the overall chroma a bit by +23 to strengthen the flower color.
I used the Chroma vs. Hue balancer and drastically reduced the chroma of the greens (similar to de-saturating only the greens in an image).
In addition to the Lab adjustments above, I did de-convolution sharpen it just a teeny weeny bit . . .
Comments (except for composition) welcome, good or bad