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Thread started 06 Mar 2011 (Sunday) 12:48
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Boosting individual color in CS4

 
Michelle ­ Brooks ­ Photography
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Mar 06, 2011 12:48 |  #1

Hey y'all; if I have an image that I want to boost the color, say, in the ties of the groomsmen, what's the best and easiest way to do that in CS4?


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D ­ Thompson
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Mar 06, 2011 13:21 |  #2

Hue/Sat layer masked to just their ties.


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Michelle ­ Brooks ­ Photography
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Mar 06, 2011 13:24 |  #3

D Thompson wrote in post #11967239 (external link)
Hue/Sat layer masked to just their ties.

Okayyy...in Idiot Speak, what exactly does that mean? :oops:


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Mar 06, 2011 13:50 |  #4

It's an Adjustment layer (you click on the little black/white icon at the bottom of your layers pallette and choose Hue/Saturation. It comes with a mask. Get the colors the way you want, then fill the mask with black to "hide" everything then paint the ties with white.

Oh, and get the book "Layers" by Matt Kloskowsi and start readin' up on this stuff, and start in with the Photoshop tutorials! Quick:)!


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Mar 06, 2011 14:06 |  #5

Michelle Brooks Photography wrote in post #11967259 (external link)
Okayyy...in Idiot Speak, what exactly does that mean? :oops:

What Tony said.;)


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Mar 06, 2011 14:26 |  #6

Ok, I did the Hue/Sat layer, got the tie the color I wanted; how do I then fill the mask with black?


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Mar 06, 2011 14:43 |  #7

Click on the layer mask. Make sure your foreground color is set to black at the bottom of the Tools bar. Press Shift-Backspace and choose to fill with the foreground color. Your mask should turn blace. Then, select a brush, enlarge the image (with the mask still selected), select the white background color as the new foreground color, and brush white over the needed areas, and voila!


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Mar 06, 2011 14:55 as a reply to  @ tonylong's post |  #8

I have CS3 so im sure you can do the same thing, it just probably in a different place.

The best way would be to use one of the selection tools to select the area around the ties, so that what you are doing would effect the rest of the image.

Then got SELECT > COLOR RANGE. Use the eye drop to select the color you're trying to affect. Once you do that, adjust the percentage. Lower selects the exact pixels you selected, and a high percentage selects a wider range.

Once you've done that, THEN go to whatever means you want change, affect or saturate that color. CONTROL D removes the selection guidelines.




  
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Mar 06, 2011 15:12 |  #9

If you do want to select the ties first, then try this:

Select the ties in the background area using the select tool of choice, then click on the adjustment layer icon and choose Hue/Saturation, and, like magic, the adjustment layer should appear with a mask that is black except for the selected area!


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Michelle ­ Brooks ­ Photography
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Mar 06, 2011 15:20 |  #10

tonylong wrote in post #11967710 (external link)
Click on the layer mask. Make sure your foreground color is set to black at the bottom of the Tools bar. Press Shift-Backspace and choose to fill with the foreground color. Your mask should turn blace. Then, select a brush, enlarge the image (with the mask still selected), select the white background color as the new foreground color, and brush white over the needed areas, and voila!

Ahhh! I thought it was Ctrl/backspace and that wasn't working. ;) Thanks, Tony.


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Mar 06, 2011 15:36 |  #11

Michelle Brooks Photography wrote in post #11967910 (external link)
Ahhh! I thought it was Ctrl/backspace and that wasn't working. ;) Thanks, Tony.

It depends on what your foreground/background colors are set at. Ctrl/backspace uses the background color while Alt/backspace will use your foreground color.


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Michelle ­ Brooks ­ Photography
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Mar 07, 2011 09:56 |  #12

Tony your method worked great. I couldn't get the selection method, but that's on me, no practice with the selection tools.


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tonylong
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Mar 07, 2011 12:25 |  #13

Michelle Brooks Photography wrote in post #11972691 (external link)
Tony your method worked great. I couldn't get the selection method, but that's on me, no practice with the selection tools.

Well, good! For the selection stuff, there are several tools and all worth learning how to use, but it is a lot of learning and practice to get a feel of things!


Tony
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Boosting individual color in CS4
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