Home
 Art of Success
Business Coaching
Creating Wealth
Marketing
Management
Success
Free Ezine
Photoshop Tutorials
Site Build It
Important Links
Photography 101
Our Privacy Policy
Testimonials
Enlightened Tripod
Photography Samples
Biography
Business Tools
Digital Imaging 11
Janalee's Party
Digital Imaging 12
Site Map
Heart and Home
Contact Me
Mexico 2010

PhotoshopCurves

Lesson 4 Photoshop Curves

— A Command Primer —

Please note that whenever possible Curves as well as any other form of image adjustment should be done as an Adjustment Layer

Like the Levels command, the Curves command allows you to adjust the tonal range of an image. However the range and quality of adjustment is much greater. Levels is similar to using a hatchet, Curves is more scalpel-like in its precision. The Levels command limits adjustments to just three variables, highlights, shadows and midtones. With the Curves command, you can adjust any point along a 0 - 100% scale while keeping up to 15 other values constant. This precision and accuracy can be intimidating to a new user but it need not be.

Before using the Curves command, go to Image | Mode | and select Lab Color . Adjustment of tonality levels can be done in other color modes, but artifacts and color shifts can result, especially if your monitor is not well calibrated. When you are done editing the tonality you can return to your previous image mode.

While editing your image, open the curves dialog box. Image | Adjust | Curves

You should see a dialog box as below in Figure 1. The channel should be set to Lightness.

Curves 1

Figure 1

The horizontal axis of the graph represents the original brightness values of the pixels (Input levels); the vertical axis represents the new brightness levels (Output levels). In the default diagonal line, no pixels have been mapped to new values, so all pixels have the same Input and Output values. For Lab Color or CMYK images the curve displays percentage values from 0 to 100, with the whitest highlight (0) on the lower left. The darkest shadow (100) is on the upper right. For RGB images, Curves displays brightness values from 0 to 255, with the shadows on the left.

While it is possible to use many adjustment points, usually only three are needed! The software automatically controlling most scanners tries to make the world a mix of midtones as shown below. No tone too black, no tone too white, all tones just right.

Curves 2

Figure 2

This was okay for Goldilocks' porridge but most of us like some snap in our images!

Start by moving the crosshair cursor to point A and clicking to establish an anchor/drag point. This point will be used to adjust the quarter-tones or highlights. Then move to point B, click and establish a mid-tone anchor/drag point. Finally move to point C and establish a three-quarter-tone or shadow anchor/drag point. See Figure 3.

Curves 3

Figure 3

Make sure you have the preview box checked at this point so you can see the changes as you make them!

Adjusting the contrast can now be done via three simple steps.

(1) Pull the highlights down to the desired level.

Grab point A, the highlight drag point by moving the cursor over it and clicking. Pull it down while watching the highlights in your image. Clouds if available are good visual reference points. Stop pulling when things are to your liking. Most midtones and all the shadows should remain unchanged. Be careful not to burn out the highlights by going too far.

See figure 4.

Curves 4 Curves 5

Figure 4

Grab point C, the shadow drag point by moving the cursor over it and clicking. Push it up while watching the shadows in your image. Stop pushing when things have darkened to your liking.

See Figure 5. You can move the drag point slightly left or right for more subtle tone changes.

Curves 6 Curves 7

Figure 5

Grab point B, the midtone point and tweek the midtones up or down so the overall image tonality looks good. Sometimes this might night not be needed, but the first two steps will usually move things out of visual wack enough that some midtone adjustment is necessary.

See Figure 6.

Curves 8 Curves 9

Figure 6

The new tonality curve you've just created to enhance your image is called the S-curve.

If an image is overly contrasty rather than flat the process would be reversed and the S would appear inverted. Simply pulling down on all three adjustment points would tend to lighten the overall image and is similar to increasing brightness with the Levels command, but much more precise. Likewise pushing up on all three adjustment points would tend to darken the overall image and is similar to decreasing brightness with the Levels command.

With plenty of practice, you will become better and better at placing the image tonality where you want it. Multi-contrast paper, RIP.

Curves 2 Curves 9

Before

After

stions and Assignment Lesson 4

Photoshop Curves

Assignment:

Take four macro photographs and apply what you have learned in “curves” tutorial and put the before and after images in a file into the drop box.

Be Creative

Answer the following questions.

1. How should curve adjustments be applied, to be done properly?

2. Are curves rough adjustments or precise adjustments?

3. What are the three variables that levels adjust a. – b. – c. –

4. What can you get if you don’t use Lab Color to make tonality adjustments?

5. What does the horizontal axis of the graph represent?

6. What does the vertical axis represent?

7. How many adjustments point can you use?

8. How many adjustment points should you use?

9. When changing highlights, what will happen to the midtones and shadows?

10. What are tonality curves called? Put everything into a file a place in the drop box.

Have Fun!!!


footer for PhotoshopCurves page