The FILM LOOK with Levels Adjustments?

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  • čas přidán 24. 07. 2018
  • In this photography tutorial, we'll take a look at editing images only using the levels adjustment tool in Capture One to manipulate an image in various ways including how to get film looks such as Kodak Portra, Ektar, Fuji Veliva, FC160 and other looks.
    If you are a channel sponsor you'll have access to all of these looks as Capture One presets - check out the community tab for the channel.
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    Ted Forbes
    The Art of Photography
    2830 S. Hulen, Studio 133
    Fort Worth, TX 76109
    USA
    My name is Ted Forbes and I make videos about photography. I’ve been making photographs most of my life and I have a tremendously deep passion for photography that I want to share with you on CZcams.
    The Art of Photography is my channel and I produce photography videos to provide a 360 degree look into the world of making images. We all want to get better so lets do this together!
    I make videos covering famous photographers, photography techniques, composition, the history of photography, philosophy and much more.
    I also have a strong community of photographers who watch the show and we frequently do social media challenges for photographers to submit their own work. I feature the best and most interesting on the show when we do these so come check it out and get involved!
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 209

  • @jontiffinphoto
    @jontiffinphoto Před 6 lety +59

    Add to dictionary: Kodakified: verb: the process of replicating vintage film looks using the digital darkroom circa 2018.

  • @AnxiousCynic
    @AnxiousCynic Před 6 lety +25

    I've used Levels in Photoshop for lighting adjustments, but always refrained from using it for color correction. This was really helpful and enlightening, and shows the actual potential of this tool. Think I'll be taking another look at that Levels tool next time I'm editing a photo!

  • @shifteleven
    @shifteleven Před 6 lety +2

    Thanks for the video. Because subtlety is such a huge part of this, I will make these changes in a new Capture One layer. I fill the layer and then set the opacity to 80%. Then I do the changes on that layer.
    I can then sync those changes to all of the photos in a set and just adjust the opacity up if I want to make it stronger, or down if I want to back off the changes. I find that works great when I want to give a consistent tone to a series of photos, as trying to back off each R,G,B channel in a bunch of photos just too time consuming.

  • @mattwhorlow9900
    @mattwhorlow9900 Před 4 lety +3

    "Film is always an interpretation of what we see in the real world"
    Lookin' at you there Velvia! ;)
    Interestingly, every time I got hit by the "Digital is evil and lies, you must use film for accurate colour reproduction" argument, I would ask what film they use - and the answer was ALWAYS Velvia. And then I would laugh at them. Because Velvia. And Colour accuracy. Doesn't go in the same sentence.
    From my experience, Velvia popped the greens a lot too. It was the film you used if you wanted the 'jump out on Instagram' look, before instagram.
    Interestingly, here in the UK, Fuji films were generally more popular (amount discerning photographers) than Kodak - so its interesting to hear about how the different weather and climate effected how the different companies developed their film.

  • @seanshannon1800
    @seanshannon1800 Před 6 lety

    I really like that you actually explain what each of the level sliders do. I've watched other C1 tutorials and they just do without explaining the why. For those of us that are not colour theory trained it's really helpful when these concepts are explained properly. Thanks so much!

  • @markkoso
    @markkoso Před 6 lety +2

    Thank you so much for the Capture One tutorial using the levels adjustments. This helped so much. On another note, I just bought a ciro flex at an estate sale auction and came across your "old" video for it. :-) Great Stuff!

  • @nanoulandia
    @nanoulandia Před rokem

    Excellent video. I finished a postgrad in photography recently and working on my personal vision and style. One of the things I am trying to get better at is at seeing and manipulating colors, so this video is just perfect for that (I like the levels tool a lot but never used it to manipulate color). I love the cinematic look as well (big movie junkie), so your examples are just perfect. 4 years on and this video is still relevant as ever. Thanks for making it and keeping it here!

  • @HawkeScream
    @HawkeScream Před 6 lety +3

    This was so incredibly helpful. You explain things so well. Thank you!!

  • @GregAdamsEternal
    @GregAdamsEternal Před 6 lety

    Another excellent tutorial. I like the focus on specific tools (and end goals) rather than trying to cover all elements of editing a specific image. These software modules are ultimately individual tools so they deserve to be appraised on their own contribution to the whole. I'm currently focussed on Capture one 11's layers and masking. Not as advanced as Photoshops but when you consider they are now part of the non destructive raw process, the potential is incredible.

  • @Socrates...
    @Socrates... Před 6 lety +32

    please make more tutorials like this

  • @Thehyperionus
    @Thehyperionus Před 6 lety

    Finally a tutorial...thanks, it's been a while would be such an understatement :) Keep them coming please.

  • @ChrisHunt4497
    @ChrisHunt4497 Před 6 lety

    Thank you. I loved this. I am always trying to get a ‘look’ to my photos and I like the idea of researching the film looks and then taking and editing an image with that as the end goal. Suddenly my photography has become even more interesting. Thanks.

  • @JamieMPhoto
    @JamieMPhoto Před 6 lety +36

    I find it interesting that people seem to think digital gives a more realistic look, and is not at the discretion of engineers. Instead of Kodak choosing our colors, it's just the camera manufacturers. Funny that we reached "perfection" and then found it a bit boring. Thanks for the tips! I've been meaning to give Levels more of a chance ...

    • @JamieMPhoto
      @JamieMPhoto Před 6 lety +1

      P.S. Love the historic nugget about Fuji's film characteristics!

    • @michaelangeloh.5383
      @michaelangeloh.5383 Před 6 lety +4

      I do still think digital makes an image more "realistic". But that's more because of the sharpness or clarity rather. And personally, that's why I'm NOT in favor of digital technology for my own work (even outside of photography). Even though about 10-15 years ago I became fascinated with digital technology in photography, because it lets you take such clear and sharp images as much as you want, after a few years I found myself adding things like grain and even blur. Most pixel-peepers would probably find that insane, but I indeed got bored with the clarity and felt I needed to add some "flavor", and more than just changing levels and colors or anything like that. - It just has this undeniable "directness" that, some people find amazing (and it is), but at some point becomes boring and rather unattractive to me. So I prefer the "directness" of light slammed onto film, as opposed to having these almost hyper realistic digital captures.

    • @JamieMPhoto
      @JamieMPhoto Před 6 lety +2

      I do mostly agree about it looking more realistic, but also I wish I could find the information I'm looking for about how the actual sensor data looks before it's interpreted by a RAW converter (a big mess). So I should have also added that Adobe or Capture One (etc) are also doing the work of the film and paper companies. But I guess that's just getting off track ... I have also found myself seriously bored with "perfection." I feel like if I were a product or architecture photographer, it would be great, but maybe we are finally reaching the point where we are choosing different film types and different cameras for different work. Outside of billboards, it's almost as if most people expects a digital camera to be able to fill all roles. Versatility is great, but to round back to Ted's topic, I think the Sony/mirrorless revolution is our best bet at a camera adaptable enough to properly cover more ground well. Still waiting for the 8x10 feel, though ...

  • @christianl.1039
    @christianl.1039 Před 6 lety

    I can't thank you enough for this tutorial video, this will make your channel grow bigger than ever.

  • @markandrewfenton
    @markandrewfenton Před 6 lety

    Great tutorial! I've used Adobe products exclusively as a photographer and filmmaker, so naturally haven't used levels much. Now I actually understand how to use this tool much better, and I can also see how this will apply to curves in terms of getting more specific color results with curves! Looking forward to a video on the curves tool too!

  • @justinofficer3679
    @justinofficer3679 Před 4 lety

    Finally!!! Someone who knows what they’re talking about photography and color on CZcams !!!

  • @Beakerzor
    @Beakerzor Před 6 lety +2

    "Subtlety is the key" The biggest value I get from your tutorials is not where to find the settings and use them, but how you think about and see the results. I did a Command-F with the CZcams transcript open - 19 results for "little bit" (35 for "little" itself) . hehe

  • @carlosprieto6671
    @carlosprieto6671 Před rokem

    Sir, this is the best video about a creative use of levels that I have seen. Thanks a lot!

  • @christopheralt2156
    @christopheralt2156 Před 6 lety

    Thanks for the great tutorial. I think this is my favorite video of yours so far, next to the artist series. Levels adjustment would be awesome to see as well.

  • @Klickerman
    @Klickerman Před 4 lety

    Great video! The sequential presentation of the concepts made the tool look so simple but yet it is so powerful. Thanks 🙏!

  • @Josechpruiz
    @Josechpruiz Před 6 lety

    I've always used level adjustments but never thought on this approach. There's always something new to learn. Thanks!!

  • @Kwahntum
    @Kwahntum Před 6 lety

    Great video, I have burned through a lot of the beginner CZcams vids now and they have seemed a bit repetitive. Glad I found your channel to take thinks to the next level. Thank you!

  • @stevenl4142
    @stevenl4142 Před 6 lety

    This is one great video! Can hardly wait for the next one. Thanks...

  • @arthurrmcphee4885
    @arthurrmcphee4885 Před 6 lety

    Excellent video and it's clear you have a film background and understood how film color casting works. This is a lost art that I used to implement while as a photographer when using film we implemented the subtle adjustment to color balance Kodak ektachrome 64 film stock every day we worked. You're very subtle about how you inform the new digital user what they need to understand about photography and color use, instead of telling them plug n play presets which doesn't explain the science of color. As I said excellent video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @ruaangrobler3035
    @ruaangrobler3035 Před 5 lety

    aaaand with this video you finally got my sub. Very nice to hear the deeper motivation and the discussion about film. As a child of the digital age I missed out on playing with film. Thanks

  • @johngonzales7130
    @johngonzales7130 Před 3 lety

    thanks so much for this video! i've been looking for old film presets and LUTs. now i can make my own!

  • @daniaahmad4015
    @daniaahmad4015 Před 4 lety

    This helped me so much!!! Finally I can get the look i want. I made a chart of the colors hehe so its easy me to refernce instead of keep going back and forth. Thank you so much!!!

  • @acidsnow5915
    @acidsnow5915 Před 6 lety

    what a great tutorial!
    thanks for sharing this with us!
    film just has the best look ever!

  • @fredwilsenack8634
    @fredwilsenack8634 Před 6 lety

    Top shelf tutorial. Used Levels before to tweak colours but never fully grasped what was happening. Enjoyed the connections to the days of film. Thank you!

  • @canucklehead28
    @canucklehead28 Před 6 lety

    Thanks for the Capture One demonstration. I tried to like Lightroom but I always found myself coming back to Capture One, which I use almost exclusively now. There's not that many videos online compared to Lightroom. As always, keep up the great work!

  • @jenethompsonart
    @jenethompsonart Před 6 lety +1

    Cool! 😍 Good to know! I don’t have Capture One but I will try this in Photoshop.

  • @tclin2938
    @tclin2938 Před 6 lety

    Learning how to use curve's each channel to get the tone I want and that film-ish look took my post processing skills to another level. And it looks like the level adjustment tool in capture one is easier to use than lightroom's curve tool. Great video.

  • @leo12619
    @leo12619 Před 6 lety

    really enjoyed this, started watching just out of curiosity and half way through loaded up some images to play around with.

  • @KaneAndPia
    @KaneAndPia Před 6 lety +1

    Amazing video Ted. Going to check out this app ASAP!

  • @duaneswaby622
    @duaneswaby622 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for this! I've not been digging into the channels to tweak my colours with levels. Definitely will play with it more now!

  • @martinyip65
    @martinyip65 Před 5 lety

    Thanks Ted. I have watched a lot of Capture One webinars but couldn't find one on this particular aspect. I really like Capture One for my Fujifilm stuff. Excellent demos and very interesting references to film stock looks.

  • @44492611
    @44492611 Před 6 lety

    Oh thank you so much. Have been baffled by this histogram stuff for a long time.

  • @vraedum
    @vraedum Před 6 lety

    Thanks for the tutorial. Great explanations for starters, and also detailed knowledge for intermediate. Still picked up a couple of tips, even though this could be the 10th+ video on using levels. Loved how you talk about intentions, that helped. Subscribing!

  • @erdejo01
    @erdejo01 Před 6 lety

    Hi Ted. Great video. I've been using Capture One 11 for about a week or so now and love it. I've learned so much from CZcams, including your videos!!!
    One thing I've started to use on almost everything is layers. I think that if you do these level manipulations that you show on 1 or more layers, you can really go to town and even use masks.
    Handy tip: create the layer, set the opacity to 70 or 80 before doing anything. That way you can dial down the effects, but even up a little if you wanted to afterwards.....
    Keep them coming......

    • @erdejo01
      @erdejo01 Před 6 lety

      Oh, one thing I forgot: you asked for ideas for future videos. I would like to find out how to do the "orange & teal" look in C1 Pro 11. I've seen several for LR, but none for C1...... I know it's being used a lot, I just want to see if I can recreate something similar and then play around with other color combos......
      Still trying to find my " signature look".....
      Thanks again.

  • @sbai4319
    @sbai4319 Před 6 lety

    Hi Ted,
    Thanks for this great video. I use a plug in to simulate the film look of a variety of film types. I also have a bit of a project going where I scan my film images to compare and contrast with the digital work so I have a benchmark for some comparison. I still respect and anjoy the the techniques used in the photography of the past as I feel this makes me a better photographer.

  • @jacquesjohnson639
    @jacquesjohnson639 Před 6 lety

    🙌🏽👏🏽 🎤drop. I’m going to have to watch this on loop to take all this in. Thanks!

  • @dennisvanmierlo
    @dennisvanmierlo Před 4 lety

    Hi Ted,
    This is a very very interesting and amazing video. I learned a lot! Thank you 👌😊
    Lot’s of greetings,
    Dennis

  • @patrickvannerum9327
    @patrickvannerum9327 Před 5 lety +1

    Great tutorials! I’m switching from Lightroom to c1 at the moment. This really helps!

    • @dennisvanmierlo
      @dennisvanmierlo Před 4 lety

      Patrick van Nerum
      Same for me. I also switched from Lightroom to Capture One. It is a great piece of software, specially for Fujifilm files.

  • @davidsl9381
    @davidsl9381 Před 4 lety

    Best explanation I’ve ever seen. Now I almost understand and will try to put to use on my next session with C1 20.

  • @uselessweirdo
    @uselessweirdo Před 6 lety +1

    Great video, as usual. I use Lightroom, but the idea is the same. If you understand colours, the tool won't be a problem

  • @bumpystories
    @bumpystories Před 5 lety

    Loved it... I have been learning a lot from you. Thanks a ton.

  • @malcolmlawrence3169
    @malcolmlawrence3169 Před 6 lety

    Thanks Ted. Great video. I’ve been getting into DxO Photolab Elite with Filmpack 5 but this looks great too. Best wishes

  • @lisalawn1111
    @lisalawn1111 Před 5 lety

    You are my best photogrophy teacher! Thank you :))

  • @Lastman737
    @Lastman737 Před 6 lety

    Good call staying in for this one because Texas is like living in a toaster oven right now! Keep up the good content! 📷✌

  • @marka.ashford7059
    @marka.ashford7059 Před 6 lety

    Thansk Ted, that was the sort fo video I was looking for. I am a CapOne user and have been expeirmenting with the Levels tool. This was eductaional.

  • @derkling
    @derkling Před 6 lety

    Great tutorial... I'm a darktable user and there is a similar tool, I'm going to give it a go! Thanks.

  • @narah3281
    @narah3281 Před 6 lety

    ah thanks Ted! I've been trying out this level tool in CO, so it is very helpful.

  • @markjarrett9400
    @markjarrett9400 Před 6 lety

    Very interesting video. Thank you for making it. I am a lightroom user and look forward to your curves adjustment video. In the meantime I will start playing around with it. I read an article on dictionary's and words. Essentially a word exists the moment it is thought of, written or said. It may not be in an dictionary, but it exists the moment you ascribe a meaning to it.

  • @Mowikan
    @Mowikan Před 4 lety

    One tool to rule them all! thx for this great video!

  • @alistairnitz
    @alistairnitz Před 6 lety

    Wow, I found this to be a very interesting video. I listened in awe how you shaped the colours to get a specific film look. I have been learning similar ways in lightroom with the curves adjustments. But I have still so much to learn.
    I would appreciate if you could do a similar video for us Adobe Photoshop owners. Not have Capture One and I do not want to go down the path to purchase another program as I have Adobe and Luminar. There is enough for me to learn to us these properly. Thanks again.

  • @davidapatino
    @davidapatino Před 6 lety

    very cool ted! nice breakdown of getting those film stock feels

  • @kdavis99
    @kdavis99 Před 6 lety

    I thought I understood levels, but it was great to see how to work the RGB part of it. Very helpful

  • @norrinRadd026
    @norrinRadd026 Před 5 lety

    Thank you. Honestly, I never thought to use the levels tool to make these types of adjustments.

  • @AnastasTarpanov
    @AnastasTarpanov Před 6 lety

    Great video, it will be interesting to see complete workflow, from importing, edit to export for print/web for example.

  • @-grey
    @-grey Před 6 lety

    I used colour balance for this for a while. I usually push the highlights toward yellow a touch, shadows toward blue a touch, and mids towards green and red to take the magenta out of skin and replace it with nice red tones.

  • @ParalysedGekko
    @ParalysedGekko Před 6 lety

    Amazingly useful. Many thanks for that!

  • @l34rn25
    @l34rn25 Před 5 lety

    Very informative tutorial. Thank you

  • @dominey
    @dominey Před 6 lety

    Super interesting point towards the end about Fujifilm being designed for weather in Tokyo!

  • @davidswinnard7565
    @davidswinnard7565 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for the great information in this video. A succinct description of what you can do with the colour levels (and why you'd want to). You give a few examples of the highlight/shadow colour biases of a few films. I was mostly a b/w film user in my time so my experience with these biases is minimal (though I do remember Kodachrome 25 and Velvia fondly).
    I was wondering if you could expand a bit more on the subject of the colour bias or "inherent look" of a wider variety of colour films? (my favourite search engine wasn't much help here...)

  • @neuIyn
    @neuIyn Před 6 lety +1

    I’ve been trying to find ways to make my portraits have a “painterly” look, a nice example of something close is the work of Alex Stoddard. I know it has a lot to do with studio lights, but tips for editing in that style would be really cool too.

  • @nailsenkal58
    @nailsenkal58 Před 6 lety

    Nice video. I have been using Phase One 11 for about one year with my 7Rii. Using Levels adjustment option looks easy and very satisfying. However I believe the RGB selection is an option with the Pro version!

  • @seamydobbsno1
    @seamydobbsno1 Před 5 lety +1

    Are you going to continue with this tutorial series?? Enjoyed the first few!!

  • @n8owl844
    @n8owl844 Před 5 lety

    Thank you really much, this helped a lot :)

  • @davisparkhurst6637
    @davisparkhurst6637 Před 6 lety

    Nice work! I didn’t realize it was simple and doesn’t require years of practice.

  • @joelcarcamo3857
    @joelcarcamo3857 Před 2 lety

    Really useful thank you Ted actually I will watch it again

  • @valentins.352
    @valentins.352 Před 6 lety +4

    Hi Ted, are you going to take a look at the Canon M50? I know you normally don't do camera reviews but I would like to hear your opinion on this camera. Btw big fan of your channel.
    Greetings from Austria

  • @MetaphorTravel
    @MetaphorTravel Před 6 lety

    very interesting and helpful video ... thank you!

  • @olyster
    @olyster Před 6 lety

    Awesome Video!!!! Thanks!!!

  • @dungbeetlemovies
    @dungbeetlemovies Před 6 lety

    Great video, Ted. Using more than one channel also seems to make the warming up or cooling down effect look more 'natural', for want of a better expression.

  • @jasonblackman
    @jasonblackman Před 6 lety +1

    This is a great tutorial, Ted. I've tried, with other processing software, to attempt exactly this and was not very successful. Thanks so much. By the way, are photo assignments still in a holding pattern?

  • @archeryandstuffwithstevela3423

    Yes Lightroom please. Only editor I seem to use these days. Great vid!

  • @jmalmsten
    @jmalmsten Před 6 lety +2

    I'm pretty sure that the handles you call contrast is really the gamma adjustment. Basically it adjusts the 50 percent grey portion.
    Contrast on the other hand would move the values away from each other. Gamma doesn't do that per se.

  • @Poverello2001
    @Poverello2001 Před 6 lety

    Great video. I'd like to develop my own look and feel for my photographs and this video inspired me to use the levels adjustments to do that. Maybe you could also cover similar techniques for B&W photos?

  • @draganmikki5688
    @draganmikki5688 Před rokem

    Very useful video even for regular users. It might be worth mentioning Capture one's EXP. Warning feature, which helps you in preventing clipping in real time.

  • @ARNABVLOGS
    @ARNABVLOGS Před 6 lety +2

    Sir I'm your big fan....

  • @flexman22
    @flexman22 Před 5 lety

    Great Channel. I’m fairly new to photography. One thing that has confused me is there are so many options in how the picture can look, I wonder what you’re supposed to go for. I’ve been playing around with levels adjustment a lot recently. I love the control. I guess as you were getting at, it’s down to the photographer to go for what they want. I suppose in turn this also means using the tools that they want in post processing, as that is another thing that has confused me: So many controls that seem to do similar things. So now I will go for the look that I want (unique to me) and use the tools that I feel get me there in the way I want. Thanks for helping me focus.

  • @pedroferreirabass
    @pedroferreirabass Před 5 lety

    Wow. Great video. Thank you.

  • @jc-crafford
    @jc-crafford Před 6 lety

    Thank you, this was very practical and informative. Please more videos like this on Ps and Capture One.

  • @kishoreseetharaman8287

    Thank you very much. Very useful.

  • @BigRockNor
    @BigRockNor Před 3 lety

    Excellent!

  • @BlackAdderNY
    @BlackAdderNY Před 6 lety

    Great video. Long time subscriber. Question: Is there a way to reproduce the Autochrome look with digital photos? I'm thinking of the photos that Albert Khan commissioned pre-WWI. I keep trying but can't seem to really get close. Any suggestions? I would love to see a video on that subject.

  • @antonsiberian
    @antonsiberian Před 6 lety

    Nice tutorial!
    Greetings from Siberia.

  • @Camrographer
    @Camrographer Před 6 lety +1

    Hi Ted,
    What are thoughts in regards to Global vs masks vs brush adjustments? When and why is one more appropriate over another?

  • @JohnDrummondPhoto
    @JohnDrummondPhoto Před 6 lety

    Thanks, Ted. Do Lightroom's global & local control of individual colors' hue, luminance, & saturation correlate to Capture 1's RGB levels tool?

  • @MCRparkour
    @MCRparkour Před 5 lety +1

    You should do more tutorials like this one, and about film looks

  • @bernaaa7138
    @bernaaa7138 Před 6 lety +1

    Hi Ted, would be cool if you make a studio tour to show us your place and gears :)

  • @jennheflin
    @jennheflin Před 4 lety

    Great tutorial. Would you mind explaining the difference between using levels over curves to adjust colors? Thanks!

  • @archer41eh
    @archer41eh Před 6 lety

    I like the idea of the two histograms.

  • @JessDemant
    @JessDemant Před 6 lety

    Great info, thanks a lot :)

  • @Huumetukka
    @Huumetukka Před 6 lety

    Hi Ted, I liked this video a lot. I've been thinking of getting Capture One, would you recommend it as an lightroom alternative?

  • @pictie
    @pictie Před 6 lety

    I was looking at my old film prints and noticed that compared to digital thairs what seamed to be color decay in the background mainly with greens. Is that a optical design flaw or somthing to do with the science of film ? Love the videos.

  • @CHRISTOPH-B
    @CHRISTOPH-B Před 6 lety

    Very nice video!

  • @dankan1982
    @dankan1982 Před 6 lety

    Great video 👍

  • @phillipgates389
    @phillipgates389 Před 4 lety

    Great. More on using C1 creatively and things beyond basic editing please. There are few tutorials on all the possibilities of curves and levels. Thanks.

  • @184186
    @184186 Před 6 lety

    Ted, great tutorial. I agree about not going for "presets" and pursuing your own vision in photography. I did a search for Capture One and couldn't find much about the software. I'm using Adobe CS5/PS and have a levels feature but nothing like what I saw in your video using Capture One. Can you point me to a couple of URLS? Thanks Jan