The Debate Continues: Is Sky Replacement a Valid Technique or a Photographic Cheat?

The Debate Continues: Is Sky Replacement a Valid Technique or a Photographic Cheat?

Now that sky replacement has become more effective and ubiquitous in photo-editing software, more and more photographers may feel tempted to give it a try, but is it a valid photographic tool or just a lazy way to save a subpar image?

I’ll admit, I’m a purist in my photo editing. Like many photographers, I have two sets of self-defined criteria that I adhere to when working on an image. For my personal work, like landscapes and travel images, I endeavor to return the image to the look and feel of the moment in which it was shot. I don’t add things that weren’t there, and I don’t remove things that change the meaning of the image. The integrity of the moment and place are the most important to me as I edit. For my client work, sure, I’m trying to paint clients, products, and locations in the best light. I’ll employ a more intensive level of retouching, merging multiple exposures for real estate, beautifying subjects for portraits, and removing unsightly distractions for commercial work. The guidelines I’ve set for myself are standards about which I feel comfortable. 

Sometimes, you get lucky, and all of the elements are there for a great photograph.

In most situations, I’m not comfortable with the idea of swapping skies. I teach whole lessons in my travel photography classes specifically on how to make the best of a boring sky or less than ideal lighting conditions. Tricks like adjustments in framing and perspective, opting for longer exposures to emphasize movement, and searching for the attractive or compelling components in a seemingly flat or lifeless scene are important skills for a photographer to develop. Rather than resorting to swapping out a sky, I challenge myself and my students to push harder creatively and find a shot that does work.

This sunrise had great atmosphere below the horizon, but the sky was flat. I decided the softness of the empty sky still worked for me. If I had replaced the sky with a spectacular and colorful sunrise, it would have competed too much with the fog in the foreground.

Plenty of photographers disagree with my feelings on sky replacement; if they didn’t, then companies like Adobe and Skylum wouldn’t put so much effort into the development and refinement of these tools. I’m always interested in hearing what photographers think, so I combed through some comments on recent Fstoppers articles about sky replacement and posed this question to my social media circles:

Do you or would you swap skies in an image? Why or why not?

The responses were surprisingly varied and well reasoned,

In Favor of Sky Replacement

“Yes, absolutely. The sky can make a huge difference to the look and feel of an image, and I want to make sure clients are happy with the result. For my own work, I tend not to, but for client work, it's definitely an option for me.”

“Yes, I do! Makes the image way more dramatic! [I do it] for my clients, my artistic soul, and my portfolio!”

“I would usually say no, but I just swapped the sky on an image from AZ last weekend. The sun was in the photo and was (of course) blown out. I like it much better without the huge hot spot. I personally consider it a last resort. I certainly wouldn’t fault anyone for swapping skies, but for me, that’s more 'digital art' than photography. Even in the shot I swapped, I replaced it with basically the same sky and clouds, just without the blown-out sun.”

“Hell yes. I’m not a journalist, and it’s not my job to make my photos represent reality. If it’s prettier, then why not?”

“Yes, but very selectively. You have to know what you're doing and pay attention to make it work, such as the direction of light, defocus of clouds. I am not a purist, and it can be used as an artistic expression.”

“In an extreme situation, I might — if you travel a long way for a shot or it’s a one-time location (say on vacation), and bad luck gives you a dead sky, let’s say. I may use something that is a natural match, not something dramatically or artificially different.”

“Guys. It’s not blasphemy. It’s not the death of photography. It’s just a piece of software for image enhancement. Like any other tool, in the hands of someone without talent or taste, it’ll produce some unfortunate results. In the hands of a pro who understands what a client might be looking for and can use some restraint with the sliders, it’ll produce perfectly usable and attractive results.”

Opposed to Sky Replacement

“I personally don’t do any photo editing other than the typical cropping, boosts in contrast, saturation, brightness. Anything else in my opinion is cheating. But I’m old school.”

“I don’t, mainly because I tried it once and I sucked at it, lol. In all seriousness, I do as little manipulation to my photos as possible. I make the usual adjustments. Maybe apply a radial or graduated filter, depending on the photo. But I want the photo to be an accurate representation of what I saw.”

“I'm just a normal person who takes photos of my kid, but I find this sky-swapping function creepy? I guess because I'm a dinosaur who feels creeped out by how many ways we can make a real-looking photograph tell lies.”

“No. Because I think a photo should represent the effort that was involved in being there for the right natural sky.”

“I don’t and wouldn’t. Landscapes are my jam, and part of the challenge and fun is waiting for and getting the perfect light. But also, switching the sky probably means the light wasn’t great and a new sky won’t match the sun angles, color, or brightness of the foreground. Not for me in my own stuff and I don’t really care for images that used the technique, plus I wonder how many photographers use their own other sky shots to swap in or just grab assets from someone else?”

“Usually not. Wait for clouds. It's like fishing: sometimes, it's amazing; sometimes, it's not.”

“No. Part of taking a photo, for me, is the effort to get a good shot with the correct light and an epic sky. It would be like fishing out of a stocked tank instead of a lake or ocean. It’s such a thrill to get a great shot with all elements just right. Swapping in a better sky is just not satisfying. But then, I’m mostly just taking photos for myself, and I’ll know it’s a fake.”

“As a technology geek, I find this fascinating, but as a photographer, I’m quite appalled and insulted. This current obsession with sky replacement reminds me of the over-the-top, garish HDR fad years ago. I’m not at all interested in using it, but if it makes you happy, have at it.”

“The photographic equivalent of lip-syncing. And if you didn't even shoot that sky yourself, you're lip-syncing someone else's track.”

“Sky replacement. Why not drop photography and use an algorithm replacing the sky, people, surroundings to people's calculated liking. Fake everything! I think there should be a clear distinction between fake smear and photos. This is not painting with light; it is just computational lies posing as photography.”

Not every sky needs to be hyper-textured, brightly colored, or filled with intrigue.

In a world that feels scary and upside-down, I can understand wanting to create a perfectly beautiful image, whether it happened in one exposure or via sky replacement, but like all technological advancements, the lasting ramifications have to be considered. I have read many responses to and philosophies about these types of photo manipulation questions in the past, but sky replacement seems to be a new boundary that is causing quite a lot of debate in the photographic community, perhaps more so than any other photo manipulation technique.

I think the polarized response has a lot to do with the fact that as technology improves, it’s much harder to judge authenticity by appearance. If we were talking about something that was obviously more manipulated, like the crunchy HDR techniques of 10 years ago, then you either love it or hate it, but it’s a relatively benign, non-threatening pursuit. Deepfake videos, a president who declares things to be “fake news” on the regular (whether you agree with him or not), and improved AI technology resulting in more convincing photo manipulation, all have one thing in common: it's getting harder and harder for us to know what’s real. As I read headlines and product announcements about new AI advancements and techniques like sky replacement, I keep coming back to one of my favorite lines in the best and original Jurassic Park: “Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.”

What are your thoughts? Do you replace skies, or does it freak you out? Let’s keep the debate going in the comments!

Jordana Wright's picture

For over a decade Jordana has been a professional photographer and photography educator. In 2018 she published "The Enthusiast's Guide to Travel Photography" with Rocky Nook Inc. Check out "Focused On Travel", her online educational photography and travel series on her YouTube page!

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65 Comments

There's a third point of view: it just looks fake, period. The light never really matches, and your brain picks that up at some level.

I was impressed with a head-on image of a hawk in-flight with a perfect sky in the background. You are right, the brain starts to pick-up on inconsistencies. In this case, the billowing clouds in the distance were as tack sharp as the bird. The trailing edge of the feathers also had artifacts from the layering. Impossible depth-of-field on a moving bird in flight.

It's hilarious how common that mistake is, to not match the depth of field in the original photo with the replacement. I see it way too often. Even though I'm just an average composite artist, it's the first thing i see in a bad composite. Here's a 3 image composite i did where the depth of field was done right. I'm pleased with this outcome.

This lends just more credence to the accusation that you "Photoshopped" the image. Pure unadulterated fraud.

I have debated this in another thread, I noticed that you quoted me from that one.

I think reality should play a significant role in photography; there should be some criterias to define something as a photography. And lo and behold, there is already parameters to hold high, as you say.

When I worked as copywriter long time ago, I always chose premium photographers to do the pictorial work on campaigns and like. I told them what the story was, what feelings I wanted the target group to be left with after seing the ad, gave them the copy and ilustrations from the AD. Then I gave them my idea for a shoot, what kind of models we could use, and their job was to criticize my and the AD’s suggestions. Then we agreed how to do it. And we discussed it with the client. I put a lot of effort into getting the right photo with the right connotations.

The photographers would go as far as using filters on a grey and rainy day. The point was to carefully craft the photo before it was taken. I didn’t want this american glossy stockphoto alike (which was the then fake images). I wanted the real thing, real ppl., real clouds. And it worked very well. The clients trusted our evaluation: If the photo was natural and looked real, the message would reflect on the trustworthyness of their products.

There are clients and there are clients. I remember one that wanted lots of sun, vivid colors and retouching, because «people must WANT to go there on their holidays». So what do the customer think when it definitely doesn’t look like a colorful wet dream? «Then they have already spent their money». Not sustainable business, I would say. It was a lie.

To me it’s a warning when you get a tool for replacing sky. The adjustments become industrialized fake. That will be even more available in the recent future. A patchwork of photos and AI replaced streams, mountains, falls, people. Then it is even further away from photography, that still vouch for the real thing to most ppl. And thats not fine by me, because a photo needs to be trusted, even if the artistry in photo should be recognized.

The logical thing is to draw a line between photography and this fake pathwork that is «illustration». I’m not old fashioned. I think the more photographers indulge in manipulation, give in to clients which often have little knowledge about marketing, the less photographers they become. They are computergraphical illustrators.

The current development of the AI emphasizes, a fact that has always been part of photography: a photograph is a subjective work. And this work is received subjectively.

Through the current technical possibilities, photography is returning more to the forms of expression of painting.

The photographer determines what and how the representation is in his work. Naturalism is only one of many possibilities here.

A combination of different elements, with the aim of creating a romantic, idealistic landscape, is another.

Both may find its audience. Does it make sense to define only one genre as the true one?

Therefore, everyone uses the technique according to his taste and goals.

It makes the work a composite, and there's nothing wrong with composites per se, but they should be identified as such, and not passed-off as a single photo. However, it's pretty low on the list of problems in the world right now, and most people probably don't care at all about this issue.

The debate is irrelevant to most of the world. If you are a journalist or entering a PHOTOGRAPHY contest it isn't OK. Personally if I were to replace a sky I would say I replaced it and would limit that to sky photos I have taken. Replacing a sky with a sky you never saw, much less photographed is plagiarism in my opinion.

Iʻd never replace a sky personally, but you do you. I think such alterations to an image should be disclosed to viewers though.

As others have said, debate, what debate? Issues like this just provide an opportunity for squeaky clean pompous photographers to demonstrate just how sanctimonious they are by announcing to the world that the images they produce are pure and true!.....well good for them.

We live in the post truth age so artistically there is no argument. But for me the values of our stories are their true heart. Perhaps thats why I sense an ever widening philosophical divide from our adult children for whom the politically correct point of view rules.

Once an image has faked parts, it’s no longer a photograph. Instead, it’s a picture or other art form. Pretty to look at but not real.

But what about fashion photography which the majority of which has been heavily retouched and manipulated?
Is using a beauty dish cheating? We could go on and on...
These hardline definitions are only useful in our own minds.

Let's take it to the extreme: Is a person no longer a person once they've had plastic surgery?

I’ve seen debate about this as well. Overly manipulated photos make “ordinary” people feel inferior and make those with normal bodies feel fat. Society as a whole doesn’t benefit from this.

OTOH using creative lighting isn’t cheating. And, for that matter, a photo of someone who’s had plastic surgery isn’t cheating. It’s when the photographer goes overboard that s/he’s cheating.

What about black and white photos? There's nothing "real" about them (at least for humans and their vision), making them completely fake, too. And then there's infrared film...

That's your point of view. Color blind people may desagree. Not that they see in black and white but what ever they see are stil pictures.

B&W these days is done mainly as an artistic and/or retro venture...but is still photography.

Exactly my point too.

Should we decry Ansel Adams' work?

He didn't have a program like Photoshop to replace the sky; he made alterations to clouds, and other parts of his photos, through extensive darkroom work. I don't replace the sky but I don't have a problem with post-processing the contrast in areas of pictures to make them more dramatic.

A technique that is absolutely acceptable and has been used also back in the days of film, not just today. The only type of photography where everything should be left exactly as it was is press photography.

I suppose that any image that is not SOOC could be called fake.

Maybe, but I don't always see what the viewfinder shows and if I can't get my camera to give me a coinciding view, I have to rely on post-processing.

So as not to put myself in Ansel Adams league, what do I do with a view that a wire spoiling it, one that I cannot position myself to avoid having it in view? Do I leave it in the final image or do I remove it before printing? I tend to go along with Adams: "You don't just take a photograph, you make it." And occasionally, I am successful.

Your camera can already apply all sorts of filters and processing to the image before writing the jpeg. If it comes out of the camera black and white with purple highlights, is that real or fake?

SOOC .jpg images are manipulated by an algorithm written by an engineer that applies generic filters that ignore the actual scene.

Actual SOOC images are the unconverted raw files, which aren't easy to view, since cameras and things like Adobe all use a RAW converter to manipulate the file's data. But I've read software like DCRAW can help you out here. The files won't be much to look at, but they will be real and unadulterated by fakery.

Exactly. But somebody should care about the concept of photography.

Those things are usually to attract the attention of the viewer towards something, and to remove something unwanted. With B&W, often you wanna show textures, shapes. A boring blue sky becomes oil black, and the viewer can focus on the rest. Same with a polarizer : you remove the reflections from wet rocks, and let the viewer focus on something else. You use photoshop to remove distracting objects, films to reveal certain colors, etc... But adding birds in the sky, swapping skies, that's just not the same thing, that's creating something that isn't there, not reducing the photo to its essential components. It certainly doesn't make it illegal, but it's just not very artistic if you do it because the sky in your original photo sucked...

Analog Photography is chemistry that reacts to light. Many of your assumptions depend on a perfect chemistry, and empirical perfection in the materiality and process. This is impossible. So many of the parameters that you list as fake are adjustments to an imperfect manufacture and process that will have small deviations. Some of those deviations might change the skin colour of a blushing bride into some furious mascara colour-smear. So industry created tools to correct those imperfections. This practice is carried into digital.

Let’s imagine an annoying situation we faced in analog and flash photography: Over Developed Highlights. It wasn’t your fault, it was a chemical reaction in development that built up too much density. The worst situations were white shirts and dresses, especially collars (close to those precious smiles) that were over-developed beyond recovery. In fact, this was one of the single best reasons to use medium format film, as It was harder to over develop than most 35mm films.

Imagine if there was a darkroom trick that could save those blown highlights by magically changing the colour of the subject’s shirt?

Would that be acceptable to the subject?

A final note on film exposure and development. In a conversation with an individual who was one of the people monitoring a lab set up to process film during the Montreal 1976 Olympics, this individual told me that they processed film for international photographers that were up to six stops under or overexposed. He was astonished at the errors, for this was at a school of photography.

In my opinion, there are two kinds of people. "Purists" and "artists" Neither is better than another. Both require tremendous skill. The purist will argue, "i took this photo, there was zero photoshop, look how awesome i am" The artist will argue "look at this masterpiece, that took 3+ hours of additional work, look how awesome i am" All the while the consumer doesn't give a damn. A good photo, is a good photo. What matters is the end result.

No, there are three, you forgot the cheat. He will take his photograph, make it a fake, and then say that it is the same as the purist. There are no shortcuts to a great photograph.

I'll give you that. No one likes a cheat.

Anyone that said X brand color science is worse/better than Y brand color science - is by definition not a purist. Every image is manipulated (including colors) by an engineer at Apple, Canon, Sony... etc.

A fact i wish more people understood.

If a landscape photo has its sky replaced- it is ugly and I don't like it, and my new rule: If the sky in a photo looks great, it means it's been replaced,rendering the photo fake and thus ugly

Yes, this is very much the feeling that I'm starting to get through this debate: when a real picture has a great sky, we won't believe it's real anymore.

And that to me is a bad thing.

I think a lot could be related to jealousy; we 'honest' and 'real' photographers (everybody draws their own ethical boundary) see others replace skies or lie about their work and get a lot of attention, likes, followers and generate revenue. And the 'real' photographers think they don't deserve it because they're fake. The world is full of fake people and big mouths but it is they who get somewhere, wether we like it or not. Maybe it's easy to impress the uneducated if one drops his honor and exaggerates his achievements.
External motivation plays a big role; money is a big motivator and all too many sell their sole for that or some attention. At most I pity them..
The journey towards a great photograph is a beautiful one. It may (probably will) include failure and missed opportunities but that is how the world works. It doesn't always provide the perfect set of circumstances but that makes the satisfaction of catching a pretty scene all the better. Aren't we forgetting the journey to Ithaca if we started replacing skies? It depends what your Ithaca is I guess..

Your comment reminded me of how kids in the US receive(d) trophies for soccer and other sports merely for participating, not for working hard and achieving. Being rewarded financially or otherwise for cheating seems wrong. But as my mom used to say, you’re only fooling yourself when this happens; you know deep inside what you did. The ultimate reward comes from a combination of hard work and real success.

I suspect that many here have developed their photos in a darkroom. This is an interesting article on how photographers in the past approached making their own prints:

https://www.colorexpertsbd.com/blog/darkroom-photo-manipulation-photosho...

Whether it's a bad thing or not, I have yet to find a good and respected photographer actually doing it... I suspect some might do it for an ad campaign or something, but for a gallery, a book, stuff like that ? No way. Most people who do it are either not photographers but digital artists, or plain bad photographers. And even digital artists who do it don't make it their bread and butter, it's one tool in their belt. It's just a very bad lesson for a photographer, because it makes you lazy, especially if you didn't take the shot for the sky you're using. Not to mention that sooner or later it will catch up with you. Say you want to enter a contest, well they'll ask for the raw file, and then what ? If it's just for the fun of trying it as an amateur, no one stopping any one, have fun. You can impress your mates on Instagram with that. But I really don't see a serious passionate photographer using it regularly. It's like autotune in music : yes people can't always tell, but once they know, they think less of you, and that thing hasn't helped you progress in any way...

If I make a photo with an amazing sky and somebody is looking at it and says, well must be a sky replacement! -- I'm going to be pretty annoyed.
And if I say that no it's not, would they believe me?

I can't blame them for not believing me but I will feel hurt.

At that level it's just a relatively innocent personal pain but as said in the article, more and more we just don't know anymore what's real, what's fake. The AI fakes of everything become harder and harder to distinguish from reality and that's I think that that's going to have important ramifications for society as a whole.

Sky replacements in a picture are just one small part of that but I think that part of the strong vocal opposition against it is not just from those who fear that their own hard work out in the field to find that perfect sky is going to he devalued: I think this outcry against sky replacements is also because of the fear that we will no longer be able to spot the difference between fake and reality in the near future.

Today a sky replacement that you can still tell by wrong lighting and artefacts.
Tomorrow will bring a version of Luminar that allows AI manipulation of the people shot.
What's next? And when will the fake be indistinguishable from reality and used to spread even more convincing propaganda?
Or its mere possibility be used to discredit real news reports?

I think people are afraid of that future too, not just that hard field work is replaced by an easy job from your lazy chair and desk.

It really shouldn't matter unless your pride in the image is based on the physical difficulty of accomplishment rather than the aesthetics of vision.

I think you missed the point?

"Real" and "fake" has always been determined by the reliability of the photographer, not by the technical aspects of the photograph. That's why photographs entered into court as evidence require the sworn deposition by the photographer that it represents what he saw on the scene,. Even many early photographic manipulations fooled the relatively unsophisticated audiences of their day.

Curiously when speaking AI the word "photo" disappears and come the word 'image", the photographer becomes an image maker... With the time we will no more trust a genuine landscape, yep surely fake my dear... :-)

Is that because the "image" becomes something "imaginary"?

And what you say is already happening. The F-Stoppers "Critique The Community" hosts already say that from time to time when a sky looks too dramatic in their opinion.

In the 70s, I was replacing skies in the darkroom.

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