Something many use w/o thinking about it twice.
I also use it but I have been thinking about it and instead of dodging and burning the regular way I use a empty layers and paint on it. Not only that, if I need a color cast in some area I use the same technique. This way I can revisit my work time and time again.
When I have an over exposed area I use a color similar to what should be there on a separate layer.
Not everybody knows PS like you do.
The tip is for those of us who are not PS experts but want to learn how to use PS for basic retouching.
Rongnongno wrote:
Something many use w/o thinking about it twice.
I also use it but I have been thinking about it and instead of dodging and burning the regular way I use a empty layers and paint on it. Not only that, if I need a color cast in some area I use the same technique. This way I can revisit my work time and time again.
When I have an over exposed area I use a color similar to what should be there on a separate layer.
I learned Dodge and Burn from a tutorial on beauty retouching by Sarah Tucker. FYI - she is very experienced with Photoshop and she is a good teacher as well. She uses a layer mask in the way you describe: Create an adjustment mask; select the blending mode, invert the mask; paint back over selected areas using a soft brush at low opacity and low flow. The trick is lightly brushing and using multiple strokes to gradually build the effect. (She does it in a manner of seconds, yeah she makes it look easy. It is not easy it requires practice).
My bigger problem is remembering which is which. See attached. Yes i did develop film once upon a time, but it was long ago.
Don't let this troll bother you, Rongnongno. He's got a screw loose.
Rongnongno wrote:
Something many use w/o thinking about it twice.
I also use it but I have been thinking about it and instead of dodging and burning the regular way I use a empty layers and paint on it. Not only that, if I need a color cast in some area I use the same technique. This way I can revisit my work time and time again.
When I have an over exposed area I use a color similar to what should be there on a separate layer.
This illustrates two general points:
1) When using complex applictions, there's usually more than one way to skin a cat.
2) Many concepts and terms based in film photography survive in digital photograpy,
but with added wrinkles, often dependent on the software package.
In dodging optical prints, the shape of wands and masks may have varied, but the technique
of using was pretty much the same. And it certainly didn't depend on the brand of enlarger.
For this topic, you will probably get a lot more interested responses (and fewer yawns) in the Post-Processing Digital Images section.
Anyway, for me it depends on how involved the dodge/burn project is. If it's just a quick area or two, I usually don't bother setting up layers specifically for dodge/burn. If it's more complex, then I will use layers, as it is more practical to simply activate/deactivate individual layers and try out various combinations of dodge/burn edits rather than limiting oneself to do/undo.
JD750 wrote:
Not everybody knows PS like you do.
The tip is for those of us who are not PS experts but want to learn how to use PS for basic retouching.
Have you ever seen any of his results? The only thing you can possibly learn from wrongy is how to blow highlights. Lol!
Bipod wrote:
Don't let this troll bother you, Rongnongno. He's got a screw loose.
Have you ever taken a photo in your life? The 2 of you should meet up. Larry and mo of the photography world.
It looks like some of the ladies have their panties in a bunch.
Yes, I do dodging and burning in a large proportion of my images but I do it in a separate layer. It is second nature for b&w conversions.
billnikon
Loc: Pennsylvania/Ohio/Florida/Maui/Oregon/Vermont
Rongnongno wrote:
Something many use w/o thinking about it twice.
I also use it but I have been thinking about it and instead of dodging and burning the regular way I use a empty layers and paint on it. Not only that, if I need a color cast in some area I use the same technique. This way I can revisit my work time and time again.
When I have an over exposed area I use a color similar to what should be there on a separate layer.
The dodge and burn tools in Photoshop work well for me. I use the opacity slider to get it right.
Not interested, don't respond.
I will use the gradient filter in LR , and the adjustment brush is much more accurate than PS.
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