3 Basic Editing Tips with Before and After Images

3 Basic Editing Tips with Before and After Images

Ever since the middle of high school, I've been immensely interested in "the process." You know, that middle bit between point A and point B that nobody but the artist ever sees. I've always loved peeking behind the scenes to see where something started and what kind of work and thought went into creating the finished product. To satisfy those of you who are just like me, here's the second post in my before/after series which not only shows you my images straight out of camera and the final product, but which uses each image to explain a bit more about what I do in post. If you want to dig in way further than these, I cover every step of my post processing in my Editing + Consistency class. Enjoy, friends! 

 

MONIQUE | WARMTH AND HIGHLIGHTS

5D III + 50L

This shoot with Monique at Leo Carrillo State Beach was a freaking blast. I love the light and colors out there but what I loved most about this shoot is that I was able to test out shooting through different materials (glass, mirrors, plastic, etc). In both of these shots, I shot through a Ziploc bag partially covering my lens. On the left frame, I had hard light hitting the bag which gave it those harsher artifacts, while in the right frame I had the bag in soft light for a hazier look. When you hover over these you may notice that the frame on the left was originally much darker than the right one originally was. Since I had hard light hitting the bag, if I exposed it brighter I would have lost detail in the bag and would have ended up with clear white there instead of that golden texture!

In the before/after of these the main thing you'll probably notice is the white balance (which I've talked about in a previous Before/After post but I'm about to again). I always shoot on AWB because I shoot raw and would rather not fidget with it when I can change it as much as I need to in post without losing any quality on the image. I'm all about simplicity when I'm shooting, and shooting AWB allows me to keep things that much simpler on set! A combination of shooting on AWB and shooting in the shade means that my images tent to come out on the cool side. The obvious fix for that is to push the WB pretty dang far in post (which I do because warmth makes me giddy) but if you push it too far, you may notice skin tones going bonkers. In addition to bumping the WB, I also add a bit of warmth into the shadows via Split Toning in LR (If you use PS, look up Color Balance instead). This adds in warmth without taking over the skin. Yay!

Another little tip for adding more warmth into an image, lower the highlights! I know, it seems totally unrelated. If you hover over this frame and look at the top right corner, you'll see that it blends right into the white of my website. That part of the frame is overexposed which registers as white. Even if I add all the warmth I can into an image, overexposed will still register as white. This can make frames feel disconnected. To connect the overexposed areas to the rest of the frame, I just lower the highlights by dragging down the top right point in the tone curve. Once you do that, your highlights won't be 100% white anymore which means the warmth will register there too. Win! Lastly, I just reread all of that text and I'm sorry that I'm not a better writer. Here's a ridiculous GIF of me to make this less dry:

 

HECK YEAH!

 

 

BO AND BECCA | BACK LIGHTING AND POP

5D III + 50L

WOWZA. If I had a "Top 5 Couples I've worked With" list, these two would be on it. Sure, they're ridiculously good looking but aside from that, they're both just freaking great people. Nothing can take a shoot from good to great quite like loving the people on the other side of the camera.

Okay, enough gushing Ben. Back to the good stuff. Since I'm able to work with other photographers so often through workshops, conferences, etc, I always find it so interesting when I see patterns in what fellow photographers struggle with. One that surprised me the most when I realized it a while back is how many photographers will toss back lit images because the raw is so washed out and flat that they don't think they'll be able to make anything of it. I've heard the frustration in statements like "No matter what I do, I can't get it to pop like the rest of my work." If that's you, don’t get discouraged! Shooting back lit will give you very flat images straight out of the camera. It’s okay. No need to panic.

In the image above, you'll see a pretty flat image transform into an image with my usual amount of pop. When shooting backlit, the more sun that is coming into your lens, the more washed out your raw image will look. This is because light is bouncing around inside your lens and painting light into the areas of the frame that would have been rich shadows. Luckily, this is a pretty easy fix in post although it may take some playing to figure it out. The first step in the fix is contrast. If you bring it up all the way and still feel that you're lacking the richness, this is where the other tips come in. A more general (but less controllable) fix is to try bringing up the Blacks slider. This will give some more richness into the darker areas. In some washed out images, the dark areas are still too light to register as a "Black" which means the Blacks slider won't help at all. In this case, the Tone Curve will help you out! If the Blacks slider didn't work out for you, try dragging down the shadows in your tone curve. If that didn't work, start moving up towards the midtones and dragging those down until you find a spot that works. Once you do, you'll be able to drag down that section of the tone curve until you begin to see that pop come back in. Once you get used to it, the fix takes seconds and can spare you a headache while you save some killer images!

 

JOEL AND ANNIKEN | GRIT

5D III + 35L

This lakeside session in the Norwegian mountains was pretty freaking spectacular. Aside from golden hour, twilight is my favorite light to shoot in. I love that soft, unassuming light that happens right after the sun drops below the horizon and before it's gone for the night. During this shoot, thanks to geography, that soft light that usually only sticks around for about 15 minutes ended up lasting for about 2 hours as the sun moved diagonally under the horizon. I think that the more I shoot clean, bright work, the more I crave a grittier, raw look. I've been trying to introduce that a bit more into my portfolio and with that, comes experimentation to figure out how I can capture that gritty look without it looking too forced. You may have noticed that sometimes trying to create a "film" look in post processing can make a photo look like anything but film. Maybe the fake grain looks too digital, maybe the colors are funky, etc. Well here's a trick I found that I really dig for adding in some texture without things looking to forced. It's easy as heck too! I always underexpose my images just a tad (to avoid losing texture in the skin) but for images I want to be a bit grittier, I underexpose them by a couple of stops instead. When you do this and then bring them back up in post, you'll see a subtle texture get added back into the images. Keep in mind that there's a limit to this and that every camera handles it differently. If you under expose too much, or try this trick when shooting at an extremely high ISO, the texture that gets added in will start to look pretty digital. Test it out and find the limit so you know what you camera can handle and so you can pull out this little trick next time you need something a bit less polished!

 

CYRIL AND RACHEL | DISTRACTIONS

5D III + 50L

Rachel literally jumped up and down on her couch when I showed up to shoot her wedding. That's pretty much my ideal client and I don't mean that in a braggy "she thinks I'm awesome" kind of way. If I could always work with couples as excited about photography as I am, I'll have made it.

It's not rare that I have someone describe my style as "clean." In fact, if someone says something like "I love how ____ your work is," there's a pretty fat chance that blank is filled with "clean." If you know how much of a sucker for minimalism I am, you already know how happy that makes me. Sure, I could tell you that I achieve that look through careful composition, soft editing, etc but the truth is that I'm able to foster that description by being ridiculously particular about what I leave in an image and what I take out of it. Trash on the ground? The picture doesn't need it, it's gone. Light switch on the wall? It's ugly, gone. Distracting whatever? See ya. In the frame on the right, you'll see some white specks on the ground that I took out and you'll notice that I filled in a hole in the trees behind them. This turns complicated patterned shapes into a clean solid shapes, that your subjects can pop out of instead of getting lost in. You'll also notice on the right side of the right frame that I took out a log in the path that overlapped with Cyril's hip. Bold lines like that that overlap with your subjects detract from the ever-recognizable human silhouette, making them pop less. Remove the log, Cyril gets his pop back! Lastly, in the frame on the left you'll see two tiny light artifacts that I took out of the frame on the left side of him. To me, they stood out because they were a bit harsher than the other round, softer blurs that make up the rest of the background. I know, it's tiny and it doesn't matter in the big scheme of the picture, but to be honest, I want to care about the big scheme and the tiny stuff. It takes time but aren't there a million and a half quotes about how nothing worth having comes easy? Thought so.

That's all for now, I hope you found it helpful! Feel free to dig in to my other free education in my blog or check out my Self Paced Classes. Until next time, high-fives!

Ben Sasso's picture

PHOTOGRAPHER | EDUCATOR | HECK YEAH!
Aside from taking pictures, I love to be in nature (camping, climbing, running around) and I have an unmanly love for cats. I am a firm believer in fostering a close knit photo community and encouraging individual progression. We are all in this together.

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29 Comments

Great article! But that dang gif threw me off after the first image. LOL!!! But yeah, thanks alot for this!

ha ha same,
how many people tried to move the slider in the first image?
holds hand up, I tried too!

I would have too. No shame.

Willie, haha thanks!

Nice article.
I do have a question though on adding warmth into the shadows via Split Toning in LR.

Could you share more info on this or maybe even do a separate article?
Or I'd even settle for some links you found helpful on the same subject...Thanks!!!

I do teach exactly what I do in my Editing + Consistency class. I'm sure there are plenty of general articles about how to use Split Toning out there! https://www.google.com/search?q=how+to+use+splti+toning+in+lr&ie=utf-8&o...

Thanks for this, I'm going to revisit some of my backlit images now.

You're welcome, good luck!

Many thanks for this Ben

It is always nice to read the detailed process behind someone's work.
Keep them coming!

Cheers
Ria

Thanks for the kind words. I will!

Great article, loved the before/after and the thinking (would love to see more - maybe another post with a new crop of photos?)! BTW, "loosing" should be "losing".

Thanks, John!

why would you take photos using a cold balance just to edit them to warm one?

I just personally prefer shooting on AWB so I don't have to fidget with something extra while I'm shooting. That gives me more of my focus on my subject and the emotion of the image instead of the technical camera settings. Since I shoot RAW, I have full freedom of the WB in post without losing any image quality. Some prefer to shoot on cloudy WB, etc. I just prefer AWB.

:)

You're killing me with these photos- you show a before/after but don't actually go into detail how you got the look- it's like somebody saying, "how did you achieve the look and tone of this picture?", and that person saying, "why, with photoshop and playing around with curves!"- it doesn't tell them a thing. I know you kind of want people to take your online classes to find out the exact method, but doing before/after sliders to your photos and only teasing with a mildly generic explanation of how you got the look is just a little bit cruel. :/

Haha sorry Jay Jay! don't mean to frustrate you. Some people prefer basic tips, some don't. Youre welcome to dig into google on your own as well to learn more about each aspect of what I'm talking about (how to use split toning, tone curve, etc).

He's holding back, mind. I thought the same thing. Presumably when one clicks on a link to see what it is you do to make your images "pop", they expect to actually find out—not get a long-winded self-indulgent way of being told to Google it or cough up money to pay for your one of your "lessons".

I agree, this is really a tease article to get folks to buy his lessons to learn how he achieves his looks. Not entirely honest, but ya gotta make a buck somehow. Googling information on split toning and curves as he suggests is *not* going to help me dial in the exact look of his sample photos- though he's quite aware of that. :)

Nice job Ben, great to see you on fStoppers!

Thanks!

Thanks for sharing. Another easy tip to try for recovering flat images is to use the (new-ish) Dehaze slider in LR. Or, if you have it, the Pro Contrast filter in Nik Color Efex.

Thanks for adding that in Joe!

Can we pllllllease get rid of the word pop lol?

Haha. Let's get rid of "photog" too.

I'll second that my friend! haha

wow, interesting before and afters. great work

Thanks Mike!

Cool photo transformation that help turn bad photographs into something really juicy ;)