Color Choice: Luminance Chrominance And HueAmong the tools at your disposal, the LCH Editor gives you a powerful weapon for finessing the color relationships in your images
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By Richard LoPinto
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In a previous article, I explained Color Choice Isnt By Chance (Digital Photo Pro, July/August 2007). The premise is that todays digital photography hardware and software provide a plethora of features and performance that interact to enable more control and creative options than ever before. When you understand how each tool operates, and how combinations of tools can interact, you have the opportunity to enhance original images as never before.
First, Ill discuss the individual tools in the LCH Editor and later explain and experiment to show how they interact to provide extended creativity. Well limit our initial expectations, and then with greater depth of understanding, expand our ideas.
LCH stands for Luminance, Chrominance and Hue, which are three of each images basic characteristics, affecting the viewers perception of color. Although color enhancements (fabrications) can be worked on with the LCH Editor, here Ill discuss the original color that exists in an image file, not fabricated color. Well see how the LCH Editors tools can be used to enhance existing color, adding to an images visual vibrancy. The following will provide you with a basic understanding of what each tool can do so you can begin to choose and dissect your images, learning how and when to apply each tool. Then Ill experiment with pictures to provide a visual experience about how the tool can change images.
The LCH Editors Tools
Luminance refers to an images brightness. From a technical perspective, one tries to render an image to a brightness that corresponds to the original subject and its lighting. However, from the point of view of creativity and with digital photography tools, its possible to alter the image and make the entire image brighter or darker than the original source. Its also possible to alter selected portions of the image, as in the historical technique of dodging and burning a print. As a result, by manipulation of luminance, you can alter the image dramatically or subtly, as you wish. In consideration of the images aesthetic qualities, I recommend that you carefully consider to what extent youll change the images luminance and avoid making it look odd, that is, unless you want it to look odd.
Figure 1: Fish under Coral is a classic wide-angle composition that screams for adjustments to balance the scenes range of brightness and bring out color vibrancy and details in the darker areas.
Figure 2: I used the Color Lightness tool to darken the red spectrum area of the fish by concurrently using a painting tool to selectively apply the change.
Figure 3: I used the Color Lightness tool in the blue spectrum area to change the appearance of the sky above and the water below.
This wide-angle view, taken with the Nikonos 15mm lens, is a classic perspective, with the wide-angle revealing details above and below the coral reef. The side-by-side image illustration shows a before and after comparison.
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