I have seen/heard several times that making more than one adjustment on the original image in Photoshop is a no-no, and I would like to understand more about this and what it does to the image if you do, and how multiple adjustments should be made.
Feb 16, 2011 10:23 | #1 I have seen/heard several times that making more than one adjustment on the original image in Photoshop is a no-no, and I would like to understand more about this and what it does to the image if you do, and how multiple adjustments should be made. Michelle Brooks Photography
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RandyMN Goldmember 3,131 posts Likes: 2 Joined Aug 2005 More info | Feb 16, 2011 10:27 | #2 Use layers. I do multiple adjustments all the time and rarely ever touch the original image.
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PixelMagic Cream of the Crop 5,546 posts Likes: 6 Joined Nov 2007 Location: Racine, WI More info | Feb 16, 2011 10:31 | #3 It depends on lots of other factors. First of all, was the orignal image converted from a raw file at 16-bit (PSD or TIFF)?
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PhotoJimG Hatchling 5 posts Joined Feb 2011 More info | Feb 16, 2011 10:36 | #4 Permanent banSPAM PUT AWAY This post is marked as spam. |
Feb 16, 2011 13:50 | #5 I work on my original RAW files. So I should make a copy (Control+J, right?) to do one adjustment and if I want to do more continue to make copies of that original RAW File? Michelle Brooks Photography
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k.CHU Goldmember 1,115 posts Joined Mar 2008 Location: City of Angels More info | Feb 16, 2011 13:52 | #6 make copies of raw file, and edit for different part of the picture... like say, one for sky,clothes,skin tone,foreground.... etc then layer them in PS and mask out Kevin Chu Photography
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Damo77 Goldmember 4,700 posts Likes: 115 Joined Apr 2007 Location: Brisbane, Australia More info | Feb 16, 2011 14:24 | #7 Michelle Brooks Photography wrote in post #11854462 I have seen/heard several times that making more than one adjustment on the original image in Photoshop is a no-no, and I would like to understand more about this and what it does to the image if you do, and how multiple adjustments should be made. Some basic information here
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Damo77 Goldmember 4,700 posts Likes: 115 Joined Apr 2007 Location: Brisbane, Australia More info | Feb 16, 2011 14:25 | #8 Michelle Brooks Photography wrote in post #11855728 I work on my original RAW files. So I should make a copy (Control+J, right?) to do one adjustment and if I want to do more continue to make copies of that original RAW File? No.
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tonylong ...winded More info | Feb 16, 2011 16:19 | #9 Once you open a Raw file in Photoshop, the specifics of your approach will be some combination of "best practices" and personal preference. Your Raw file will be "safe" so you can always go back and start over again. Tony
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tzalman Fatal attraction. 13,497 posts Likes: 213 Joined Apr 2005 Location: Gesher Haziv, Israel More info | Feb 16, 2011 16:48 | #10 Editing is always destructive and the effect of successive edits is cumulative. Apply a strong curve to an 8 bit image and watch the histogram turn into a comb. The spaces between the "teeth" are lost tonal values. But this is almost always a problem only of 8 bit editing because at best 8 bit has only 256 levels. Destroy a bunch of them and you won't have many left. 16 bit editing (as P.M. noted) is much safer because you can start with 65+ thousand . Throw a lot of them away and you still have more than enough. RAW editing is done in 14 bits, 16 ,384 levels, so it is very safe also. The rule "Anything that can be done in RAW, should be done in RAW" is doubly true if the secondary editing will be in 8 bit. Elie / אלי
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