Showfoto/Brightness/ro

From KDE Wiki Sandbox
Revision as of 10:39, 31 December 2010 by IulianB (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Când am făcut această fotografie, ochii mei vedeau tot felul de culori verzi puternice, şi frunze roşii în pământ.Dar cumva apartul de fotografiat nu a captat tot acel co...")

Tutorial Foto KDE 1-4: Luminozitate/Contrast/Gamma + Nuanţă/Saturaţie/Lumină

Unai Garro - Summer 2008

Am început deja aceste serii de tutoriale ceva timp în urmă, şi toate au rezolvat problemele cu lumina.Am folosit unelte precum niveluri, curbe, sau ajustarea balansului de alb.

De data asta am vrut să abordez alt tip de probleme, dar cred ca problemele de lumină ar fi mai degrabă incomplete dacă nu aş fi adresat ajustările contrast, luminozitate şi culori.Probabil eşti deja familiarizat cu acestea, dar eu cred că merită să fie incluse.

Deci haideţi să începem.Fixează culorile!

Urmăreşte:

Mai mult de câteva ori, noi facem o fotografie a unui peisaj superb, şi visăm la minunatul rezultat ce îl vom avea de îndată ce ajungem acasă.În zilele noastre, camerele digitale ne ajută să previzualizăm rezultatul pe LCD, dar de obicei nu par a fi de încredere, aşa că ajungem să vedem rezultatele de îndată ce suntem acasă.

Aşa că ajungem acasă cu superba noastră fotografie, şi găsim,dezgustaţi, că nu are culorile pe care le-am aşteptat să le aibă.Ce putem face? Folosim din nou Showfoto sau Krita,desigur!

Să vedem următoarea fotografie ca probă:

Când am făcut această fotografie, ochii mei vedeau tot felul de culori verzi puternice, şi frunze roşii în pământ.Dar cumva apartul de fotografiat nu a captat tot acel contrast pentru mine.Dar ce este contrastul? Este doar diferenţele de culori găsite în interiorul unei imagini, diferenţa dintre un pixel/regiune şi ambiantul.Cu cât are mai mult contrast imaginea, cu atât mai clară ni se va părea.

This image instead, is whiteish, it's flat, it lacks contrast. Why? because it doesn't cover the whole histogram.

"Ahhhhhh..." you'll say now.... "I know this! I can fix this using Levels! I learned it in the first tutorial!". Yes, and that's what we will try first. Open the image in Showfoto, and adjust the levels:

The result is the following image:

Not bad, is it? But still, I had a different photo in my mind. Leaves were greener, there was more contrast (like darker shadows), and the leaves on the floor were more reddish. So can we fix this? Yes, we could use the Curves to improve shadows for example. But I will show you some new tools that can achieve similar results in this case:

In Showfoto, go to the menu Color -> Brightness/Contrast/Gamma...:

You will get a very easy to use dialog with the following controls:

The first Brightness slider controls the brightness/darkness of the image. The second slider increases or reduces Contrast, and uhm... what's Gamma? Look at the following image:

The photo and histogram on the left are those of the original image. In the right hand, the three photos show the result of increasing brightness, contrast, and gamma respectively. As you can see, when using the brightness control, it moves the whole histogram to the right. Shadows will disappear and become light grays. The result isn't very pleasing, as it is less contrasty. This could be fixed by adjusting contrast. In the Contrast output, you can see that the histogram has been expanded. This means that each color has been separated further from each other, and thus increase color difference (contrast). The output is much more pleasing than the original image in this case. The image is no more flat, it's much more contrasty, and shadows are clear dark contrasted.

At this point you should have noticed something important. Both contrast and brightness controls can clip the histogram and cause information loss! Now look at the gamma adjustment. I pushed Brightness even further than the first tool, and still, the image wasn't clipped. What did the gamma tool do?

The Gamma control is like adjusting the curves tool upwards in the middle (see the figure). It affects mostly to the middle gray levels. Blacks will remain black and whites will remain white. (unlike Brightness control where blacks become gray). It compresses the histogram in the right part by compressing highlights, but shadows are expanded and thus causes to extend contrast there.

Given that this tool can clip the histogram, to avoid it as much as I can, I will change the order. Instead of doing Levels then Brightness/Contrast/Gamma, I will do Brightness/Contrast/Gamma then Levels. It's usually best adjusting levels after all other light adjustments have been done. So I did the following adjustment to the image:

I could have pushed contrast even further, but I prefer natural looking photos. Then, afterwards, even if it wasn't much needed due to the clipping, I adjusted levels a bit. This is what I got:

The result is similar to the previous one, but a bit more contrasty. Still, I'm missing colors here, something is missing? Of course, lets open the Color -> Hue/Saturation/Lightness... option from the menu:

It will open a dialog where Showfoto permits adjusting the colors of the image. The Saturation control can make colors stronger or weaker. The Hue control permits altering colors towards another one (brighter colors to darker green, or even to yellow...), and finally, Lightness can make colors brighter or darker. When the image is lightened up, it causes moving the histogram's dark part upwards and compressing the whole of it on the right, thus blacks dissappear and contrast can be reduced easily thanks to the compression.

In my adjustment, I pushed saturation up to 34, reduced lightness a bit, and retouched the greens by altering the hue slightly. This is what I got finally:

Now yes, I'm happy with the result. That's what my eyes saw!!!!!

Thanks for reading this tutorial and I hope you found it useful. Cya on the next tutorial!


Notes:

Note
1. Please note that it's very easy to get addicted to tools like saturation control and go too far adjusting them (we call it overdoing /overprocessing). We want more colors, more saturated colors... but we end up with a picture that looks very unnatural and clearly shows processing was done. My suggestion is you limit yourself to showing what your eyes or your mind saw in the scene without overdoing the photo.
Note
2. The final image was also sharpened a bit for presenting. We will cover sharpening in the following tutorials.