I noticed that you are using aRGB color space in ACR (and probably in Photoshop as well). I guess that your monitor reproduces this color space and ICC assigned to your monitor is either Adobe RGB 1988 (if your monitor uses LUT memory) or profile created by hardware calibrator. I'm assuming you're not using the sRGB profile for your monitor because that wouldn't make sense. Did you notce that using aRGB causes that image exported from ACR to Photoshop loses color saturation? It happens under ACR 15.1.1 but not happens under ACR 14.5. More over - if you open this less saturated layer in ACR again (Ctrl+Shift+A), all colors will be correct again. It doesn't happen when sRGB color profile is assigned to the monitor.
So Christian, I asked before but at 4:20 in the radial gradient, you said that you were going to increase the Blacks. So, moving the slider to the right decreases the Blacks. My question, did you really want to increase the blacks or decrease them? I'm sure you wanted to decrease them but new to Adobe viewers might get confused. The slider shows it getting lighter going to the right but...
Hey Dave, to me since I'm raising the sliders, I always see it as 'increasing blacks', of course the outcome is darker blacks and thus it is actually decreased. So you're completely right here, its just hard for me to explain this step in the 'correct' way when editing the image if that makes sense
After following this tutorial my Pictures became so epic my Speakers started playing music from Hans Zimmer
Great video, thanks! Is it possible to get the old free Google version of Nik collection to work in PS2023?
Excellent work on this image Christian 👌👌👌
Great turorial, thanks
This was enjoyable, thanks for making this!
Thank you very much!
Beautiful processing technique. It looks completely natural but even more beautiful than the original.
Thank you!
I noticed that you are using aRGB color space in ACR (and probably in Photoshop as well). I guess that your monitor reproduces this color space and ICC assigned to your monitor is either Adobe RGB 1988 (if your monitor uses LUT memory) or profile created by hardware calibrator. I'm assuming you're not using the sRGB profile for your monitor because that wouldn't make sense. Did you notce that using aRGB causes that image exported from ACR to Photoshop loses color saturation? It happens under ACR 15.1.1 but not happens under ACR 14.5.
More over - if you open this less saturated layer in ACR again (Ctrl+Shift+A), all colors will be correct again. It doesn't happen when sRGB color profile is assigned to the monitor.
Epic! I save this video and much more 😍😍
Thank you so much!
Fantastic !!
Thank you!
So Christian, I asked before but at 4:20 in the radial gradient, you said that you were going to increase the Blacks. So, moving the slider to the right decreases the Blacks. My question, did you really want to increase the blacks or decrease them? I'm sure you wanted to decrease them but new to Adobe viewers might get confused. The slider shows it getting lighter going to the right but...
By increase he meant "increase the exposure of the blacks", which of course means the blacks become lighter.
Hey Dave, to me since I'm raising the sliders, I always see it as 'increasing blacks', of course the outcome is darker blacks and thus it is actually decreased. So you're completely right here, its just hard for me to explain this step in the 'correct' way when editing the image if that makes sense