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Lightroom Presets – Fall Color. Lightroom Presets – Fall Color Home » Featured » Lightroom Presets – Fall Color Posted By Matt K on Oct 14, 2013 | 19 comments A couple of weeks ago I was out in the Colorado mountains photographing fall color (I posted some photos on my personal blog here). This past week I was in Portland, OR doing my Lightroom seminar and the colors were starting to change there as well. As I processed my fall photos I realized that I usually make the same tweaks to many of the photos. Have a good one! You may also like - Lightroom Presets - Focal Point with Blurry Backgrounds Free Lightroom Presets - Black & White HDR Presets for Landscapes Lightroom Presets - Sunflare Glow Effect Author: Matt K Matt is a full time Education Director for the NAPP and Kelby Training.

Share This Post On 19 Comments Marianne P. Submit a Comment Your email address will not be published. Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. Search About Matt Matt Kloskowski View Matt's Personal Blog and Portfolio. Watercolor Effect. As my tutorial had been choose for the Top Ten in June by NI-LIMITS BLOG. Now I continue my job and share my photo edit tricks with all my fellow readers. Step 1 Open an image, I will use this image because it suit to my tricks. Step 2 CTRL + J, duplicate the image. Step 3 CTRL + J again to duplicate layer 1 and you will get a new layer which labeled as “layer 1 copy”.

Step 4 CTRL + E to merge up both layers. Step 5 Hope you are still with me. Step 6 Still with the layer background copy, go to image > adjustment > curve and set as below. Step 7 Create a new layer and put it top of all layer. Step 8 We are nearly there, now select layer 1 and set the opacity to 60% or whatever you think suitable. The difference: Examples: Hope you guys enjoy this!

Photoshop Gradient Tool: Blending Images. Photoshop's Gradient tool may not be on most users' lists of go-to editing options. But it should be. In combination with layer masks, the Gradient tool lets you create natural-looking composite images. In this tutorial I'll show you how to combine a compelling foreground element with an interesting sky to create a seamless, believable landscape image.

In an upcoming article we'll explore how to use the Gradient tool to modify layer mask-enabled adjustments to brightness, contrast and toning. When two is better than one If your instinct is to resist the whole notion of composite imagery because it feels like 'cheating', you should know that the idea of combining pictures together has a long photographic tradition. Here our goal is to seamlessly blend the two images below into a the single image shown at the start of the article. The problem is that masking or silhouetting the horizon line is much harder than you may think.

So let’s just skip all that. Layer masks and gradients explained. Sky Series Selected Works | Eric Cahan. John Paul Caponigro :: Digital Photography Workshops :: Illuminating Creativity. Interview with W. Eugene Smith Grant winner Lu Guang. There Are 32 Things Quite Wrong With This Picture. Wouter Brandsma 荷蘭. Scotiabank CONTACT Photography FestivalTemples of Finance.

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