Tutorial on Restoring Midtone Contrast

GM
Posted By
Glenn_Mitchell
Feb 20, 2004
Views
418
Replies
12
Status
Closed
Ever take a landscape picture on a rainy, dreary day? Did it come out dark, flat, and dull looking?

If you look at the histogram, what you’re likely to see is two clumps of pixels. One up around the highlights and three-quarter tones and the other down around the shadows and quarter tones. The middle tones will be as flat as your image!

The trick is to increase those middle tones. But Curves and Levels won’t usually do the trick. Wholesale Curves/Levels adjustments invite problems with posterization.

One solution is to use a tripod, bracket your shots, and make a composite image. Another solution is to use a graduated neutral density filter in front of your lens. Both solutions are a pain.

As long as you shoot for the midtones and do not burn out your highlights or stop up your shadows, you can get lots of color and brightness back in your image *AND* still have lots of interesting sky detail, too.

I’ve posted a new tutorial on my Web site that shows you how to restore your midtones without posterizing the image with a big Curves or Levels adjustment. And all you need is one image, too.

I spent two weeks in Scotland last May/June and it was dreary the whole time. That didn;t stop me from taking some wonderful shots. My tutorial shows you how I took one from a dark, dull image to a really nice seaside landscape.

Interested? Take a look at my new tutorial, "Restore Those Midtones."

<http://www.thelightsright.com/DigitalDarkroom/Tutorials.htm>

Cheers,

Mitch

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Daryl_Pritchard
Feb 20, 2004
Mitch,

Thanks for the tutorial and the link to your website, which I’ve now added to my collection of links at <http://jazzdiver.com/photoshop>. I skimmed your tutorial and found that what you’ve done is yet one more example of what always surprises me…namely, just how much information exists in an image that would appear to be lacking detail due to contrast and lighting problems.

Regards,

Daryl
GM
Glenn_Mitchell
Feb 20, 2004
Thanks for the kind comments, Daryl.

I took the images last May/June. It took a lot of experimentation to pull up the contrast without posterizing the image.

I’m just processing them now, because they were such a challenge. I was stuck with lousy lighting, and I had to adapt and overcome.

I agree with you about how much detail we can recover, as long as we don’t burn out any highlights or stop up any shadows. With a combination of technique, effort, and luck, we can get an acceptable image out of a dull, dreary mess.

Feel free to visit my site often. It’s only a month old. I keep adding resources every couple of days.

Again, thanks for the supportive comments.

Cheers,

Mitch
DM
dave_milbut
Feb 20, 2004
nice tut’s mitch. i’m going to try that one when i get home tonight. then i’ll have a look around at the others.

thanks, dave
MV
Mathias_Vejerslev
Feb 21, 2004
Glenn, for some reason, your PDF wont open on my PC.

I dont know why, I tried downloading and viewing in the browser, but it comes up with an error.

Consider not using spaces in filenames on the web, it creates ‘hiccups’.

I applaud your initiative, just hoped to be able to read it.

Mathias
L
LenHewitt
Feb 22, 2004
Mathias,

What version of Reader are you using? The PDF was created from Acrobat PDFMaker 6 for Word, so you’ll need Reader 6 to view.
MV
Mathias_Vejerslev
Feb 22, 2004
Maybe thats the problem. Will check. Thanks, Len.
JS
John_Slate
Feb 22, 2004
Glenn might want to make his tuts more backward-compatible to increase their readership.
L
LenHewitt
Feb 22, 2004
Glenn might want to make his tuts via distiller and so have that option…..as well as keeping the PDF file-size down better.
RK
Rob_Keijzer
Feb 22, 2004
Glen,

I’ve printed your Midtone Contrast tut fine with my Acrobat reader v5, and put it in my PS tut binder (whitch will not fold close anymore).

Thanks for this one! Perfect for an optimistic photgrapher in a dreary Dutch climate 🙂 Rob
GM
Glenn_Mitchell
Feb 22, 2004
Actually, you need Adobe Acrobat 5.0 or greater. I did use Adobe Acrobat 6 to create the PDF, but I set the security restrictions to be version 5.0 compatible.

Cheers,

Mitch
GM
Glenn_Mitchell
Feb 22, 2004
Rob and Dave:

I hope you find the technique helpful. 🙂

It has sure helped me salvage my travel shots from Scotland. 😉

Cheers,

Mitch
DM
dave_milbut
Feb 23, 2004
bump

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