15 Capture One Hacks and Features You Should Know

15 Capture One Hacks and Features You Should Know

I love using Capture One. Recently, I have been working with the latest release: Capture One 23 and Capture One Live. Loved by enthusiasts and professionals alike, it is feature-heavy software. In this article, I would like to share some of the hidden and little-known features of this great software.

I think I could write a book about Capture One and how great it is. However, my patience would end at page 2, and I will run off to write another article about my Canon 5Ds and EF 70-200 f/2.8 from 2001. As much as I love software, I am not a technical photographer who writes manuals. With that in mind, let's dive into some of the incredible hacks and features of Capture One 23.

1. Customize Your Workspace

Capture One allows you to customize your workspace by adding and removing tools, changing the layout, and saving your preferred settings. I have customized my workspaces to encapsulate everything I need on a shoot, while editing, and while exporting files. Out of the box, Capture One tabs are useful, but there are some tools, such as the adjustments clipboard that are hidden. I add them to my workspace to make myself more efficient. What is more, I often also create floating tools.

2. Use Shortcuts

Capture One has many shortcuts that can save you time and make your workflow more efficient. I will write a separate article on my most used shortcuts. In the meantime, here are my three favorite ones:

  • Cmd/Ctrl+E – edit image in an external editor (Photoshop in my case)
  • Cmd/Ctrl +D – export images
  • Spacebar – view image full-screen – perfect for showing client previews on a second monitor.

3. Create Custom Styles

Custom styles can save you time by allowing you to apply a particular look or effect to multiple images with just one click. I have a bunch of custom styles I created over the years for different projects. They live in the styles tab and help me throw a quick color grade on a shoot and show the team a more or less final image.

4. Use Sessions

Sessions can save you time by allowing you to dedicate one for every shoot. I use this every time I create a new project and name it as follows: dd-mm-yyyy-project-name. This lets you keep good track of images and never lose any files.

5. Use the Focus Mask tool

The Focus Mask tool helps you identify the areas in an image that are in focus. No camera is perfect when it comes to focusing, and I sometimes like an image only to then realize it is out of focus. There are other times I forget to flip the switch into autofocus. For instances like that, the focus mask is perfect.

6. Use the Keystone Correction Tool

The Keystone Correction tool allows you to correct perspective distortion in your images. When working on location, I often want all the lines to be perfect, like in a Wes Anderson movie. This is when the keystone tool comes in handy, and I am able to fix the image and make it look a bit better and more satisfying.

7. Use the Luma Range Tool

The Luma Range tool allows you to adjust the brightness and contrast of specific areas in your image. Working in a small space, I often want to separate the background from the subject. One of the ways I do this is by using the Luma range tool. This can let me edit the brightest or the darkest parts of the image more precisely.

8. Use the Color Balance Tool

The Color Balance tool allows you to adjust the individual colors in your image. Similar to the Luma range tool in terms of precision, this one works with colors rather than exposure levels. It is often the case that I don't like the color of a particular clothing item, so I change it using this tool.

9. Use the Skin Tone Tool

The Skin Tone tool allows you to adjust the color and tone of the skin in your images. If you want to save time on retouching, or the client does not require a lot of post-production, you can pretty much "retouch" an image in no time using the skin tone tool. Just make sure you don't overdo it, as it is a far cry from actual retouching.

10. Use the Clarity Tool

The Clarity tool allows you to add or reduce texture in your images. Shooting in high resolution, I want to make sure the audience sees all the detail in the picture. This is when this tool comes in handy. Depending on the picture, I might go a little extreme with this tool at times. I developed a rule to never go above 30-40, but sometimes it's not enough.

11. Use the Noise Reduction Tool

The Noise Reduction tool allows you to reduce the noise in your images. This came in handy back in my event days when I shot on a 5D Mark II at ISO 6400 and images looked "slightly" too noisy.

12. Use the High Dynamic Range Tool

Essentially the basic adjustments tool, the High Dynamic Range tool allows you to adjust the brightness and contrast of specific areas in your image. It features all the basic sliders, but they process raw files in a much more pleasing fashion than its Lightroom counterparts.

13. Use the White Balance Tool

The White Balance tool allows you to adjust the color temperature of your images. I love playing with this tool and coloring the images yellow or blue, somewhat like the photo-filter tool in Photoshop. A super-powerful creative tool, it can also be used to correct mistakes when shooting on location.

14. Use the Black and White Tool

The Black and White tool allows you to convert your images to black and white. What I like about this feature is that you can adjust individual colors to make the image better. After you're done, don't forget that you can also color the shadows and highlights in your image. A popular technique now is to color the shadows in a blue-green tone.

15. Use the Layers Tool

The Layers tool allows you to make multiple adjustments to your images without affecting the original image. This is one of the features that originally made me quit Lightroom and switch to Capture One. It allows for much more creative control over your images. Adding gradient filters, precision adjustments to parts of images, and so much more is made a lot easier with layers. They're almost like layers in Photoshop, which is a fantastic feature. 

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Illya aims to tell stories with clothes and light. Illya's work can be seen in magazines such as Vogue, Marie Claire, and InStyle.
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11 Comments

--- "14. Use the Black and White Tool"

I like using that as a "helper" for skin retouching. Instead of creating a desaturated layer with curves and/or contrast slider, I'd just turn that on and adjust the Red and Yellow sliders. Then, turn off when I'm done.

--- "3. Create Custom Styles"
--- "15. Use the Layers Tool"

I forget when they came out with it, but, they also now allow you to save layers as a preset. So, instead of having a preset that has baked in adjustments, you can create individual layers, similar to Actions in Photoshop. Then, work from the bottom to top. For me, it helps with speed and consistency.

Its a great tool for me. Cant live without "Overlay"

Hacks?
That‘s basic features to work with CaptureOne

Unfortunately, "Hack" has been hijacked and demoted to sometimes mean "tips & tricks". I noticed this about a year or so ago. Drives me nuts.

That term has been coopted beyond recognition at this point. People think tips are hacks and think that when somebody spoofs them on social media it is a hack. Literally none of these are hacks.

Most of these are very obvious although using the Luma Range tool on linear gradient masks when needing to adjust the brightness of the sky when there are complex shapes like trees on the horizon is extremely useful.

'A popular technique now is to color the shadows in a blue-green tone.'

Seriously, people should avoid popular techniques and do something more original and less obvious.

It looks like great software but with the new AI masking features in Lightroom I'm reluctant to switch. I'm pretty confident, though, that the C1 folks must be working to bring some updated masking tools to their software since it's one of the few programs, to my knowledge, that is lacking AI masking...

All true and good, but this article feels a bit geared towards beginners. Nothing wrong with that, but I'd like to see an "intermediate and advanced" version of this article in the future

The Spacebar full-screen shortcut and Focus Mask features are news to me, or at least I missed them entirely! Thanks for the useful tips

Thanks for this Illya, just recently purchased Capture 1 and this is very helpful.

Hi Gary,

if you really want to know how good Capture One can be, you should get in touch with Paul Reiffer. There's tons of useful information on his YouTube channel. By the way, I'm a big fan of your skills, ICM or even your knowledge of image processing.
I could teach you Capture One too, but your Scottish accent is not always easy to understand for a mainland European :-)