Hello hello,
I'm fairly new to Photoshop (just a few months using it actually) and stumbled upon an adjustment that I just cannot seem to resist using--an overlay blending mode applied to a duplicate background/layer.
Typically I will get the image looking as good as I can in Camera RAW (add a nice contrasty S-curve as well), then spit it out over to Photoshop. I'll do some minor edits and tweaks, and then duplicate the layer and set it to Overlay. I'll typically bump the opacity down to somewhere in between 30 and 60; whichever looks appropriate for the type of photo. Now, the interesting thing to me is that before I do anything to the image, I think it looks great. Then after I do the Overlay and toggle the preview on and off I'm amazed how excellent the effect is, and I end up asking myself why I would not do this to every single photo.
So my questions are.....
1) Do a lot of other people do this? The reason I ask is that I don't see it mentioned in a
lot of "workflow" type tutorials or books.
2) Is there anything I'm doing to the image with this method that is "bad?" In other words,
destructive to pixels or is just not practical for any reason? Is there a better way to get
the same result but with a more highly-recommended method? And the result that I
speak of is just plain "rich." That is the word that comes to mind after doing the
overlay; the photo just looks rich and lush, and when I click the preview off my image
that I initially thought was breathtaking just looks flat and dull.
Is this a well-practiced method or am I just talkin' the crazy talk!?
-Randy







