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Improving saturation Part I

Lately while riding my bike, I find myself attracted to the colors around me, and almost feel moved by the diverse hues, shapes, and colors in the county town I live in. With my trigger finger on my camera’s shutter button, firing away in machine gun fashion, shooting up the neighborhood. So the question is: How come the colors in my processed image don’t look as “vibrant” as they did when I made the shot?

The answer lies beyond the scope of this article, but perhaps I can help.
So here’s an image I took of my neighbors cabin door. (left) I swear, it was much better looking color wise when I took the image! So how did I improve the saturation in two (2) easy steps to get the image you see below? Simple Photoshop’s ”Apply Image”!!

original

Lets begin by duplicating the background layer (ctrl+J).

palete1

Now we’re going to change from RGB to LAB mode.

menu-mode

As soon as you apply image you’ll get this dialogue box.

image-appy

The dialog has just the right (image left) defaults you want: Channel: LAB and Blending: Multiply

apply

Reduce layer one’s (top layer) opacity to suit your taste. (image top)

opacity

Your finished now except for one more step…convert the image back to RGBImage>Mode>RGB. I usually don’t flatten the image when converting back to RGB. That way I can always change the top layers opacity if I decide to.

(c) 2006 Robert Mizerek
http://microstockpix.com/smf/

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