Dealing With Halos In Your Landscape Photos

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
  • Landscape photography is synonymous with dynamic range. Deep shadows and bright highlights are in the scene and high contrast edges are common. These extremes of light and shadow that make the most compelling landscape images are also a recipe for a nasty side effect - halos. When a scene has high contrast edges, or when adjustments are pushed to exaggerate the differences between light and shadow, unattractive halos appear in your image. A halo can ruin an image. In this video, I’ll show you how to find out what is causing a halo, and how you can reduce halos and even remove them.
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    00:00 How To Remove Halos From Landscape Photos In Lightroom
    00:41 What Is A Halo?
    01:25 How Do I Find What’s Causing A Halo?
    04:10 How Do I Remove A Halo?
    05:09 Reducing Contrast At High Contrast Edges - Can Be Problematic
    06:04 Solution! Intersect A Luminance Range Mask With A Brush!
    06:40 Step 1 - Create And Refine The Luminance Range Mask
    07:50 Step 2 - Intersect The Luminance Range With A Brush
    09:01 Step 3 - Make Adjustments To Minimize The Halo
    11:13 Wrap-up

Komentáře • 41

  • @bruceatkinson932
    @bruceatkinson932 Před 2 lety +13

    Very interesting indeed Scott. It would be nice if you could demonstrate this technique in ON 1 RAW.

  • @dktraveller8364
    @dktraveller8364 Před 2 lety

    Sweet, Another great way to use the awesome intersect function! Thanks Scott.

  • @mdturnerinoz
    @mdturnerinoz Před 2 lety +1

    Halos in my landscape shots are what you identified and helped me with when we had our 1/1 in 2015. Folks should really listen to you here! And, it's easier to fix now too! Thanks again BTW!

    • @ScottDavenport
      @ScottDavenport  Před 2 lety

      Cool! And isn't is great that the tools keep getting better, and give us more options to fix stuff like this.

  • @ProfMary
    @ProfMary Před 2 lety

    Really great technique, Scott! I could have used this a couple weeks ago. I had some photos that had halos. I had another photographer who suggested a technique in Photoshop. He said to create a blank layer, set the layer to Darken mode, then use the clone stamp to erase the halo. It worked really well. It would be nice to stay in LR so I will try this next time I have halos.

  • @harrykitch9239
    @harrykitch9239 Před 2 lety +1

    Great technique! Thanks for the valuable lesson. I have a bunch of photos I'm going to go revisit.

  • @shlomoeshet8525
    @shlomoeshet8525 Před 2 lety

    Great and very useful tip. Thanks a lot, Scott.

  • @williamhager1872
    @williamhager1872 Před rokem

    GREAT video! Thank you Scott.

  • @sfbigdawg
    @sfbigdawg Před rokem

    Such a superior method to the feather brushing I've been doing. Lifesaver!!!

  • @JoeHudspeth
    @JoeHudspeth Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent Scott! Thank you.

  • @kateosborne7528
    @kateosborne7528 Před 5 měsíci

    thanks i was very surprised when i saw the halo in the original photo. Had tried the brush but this is much better

  • @photonsonpixels
    @photonsonpixels Před 2 lety +1

    Great tutorial, Scott. Those halos are a real pain in the neck. Thank you.

  • @norbertalexy8803
    @norbertalexy8803 Před 5 měsíci

    Hello Scott, thanks for this video. I'm using intersect a lot myself. But I was not aware that it was so powerful applied to the halo problem.
    Brilliant, I'm really grateful.

  • @Greg_Ashley
    @Greg_Ashley Před rokem

    This is the best explanation of intersection I have seen. Thank you.

  • @UnionMac
    @UnionMac Před 2 lety +5

    Very good information, Scott. I'd like to second others here and see how you might be able to accomplish the same with ON1 Photo Raw. Thanks once again for publicly sharing your knowledge and skills.

    • @ScottDavenport
      @ScottDavenport  Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Walt ... I'll see about doing an ON1-centric video on halo removal.

    • @simonhome3605
      @simonhome3605 Před 2 lety

      @@ScottDavenport I use ON1 Photo RAW and have been plagued with this problem of Halos. If you were to produce a tutorial video for us ON1 users that would be well received.

  • @warricksmith5178
    @warricksmith5178 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the useful vid. Up till now I've been relying on the clone stamp tool in PS, which can get the job done, but is some images can be extremely tedious and time consuming. Your LR approach might be a good alternative or complement in those situations---certainly, I'll give it a try! Thanks again.

    • @ScottDavenport
      @ScottDavenport  Před 2 lety

      It's one more arrow in the quiver. There certainly may be cases where you have to go "old school" and knuckle down for some heavy retouching.

  • @joelwolski
    @joelwolski Před 2 lety +8

    Interesting. How would you work this in On1 which doesn't have that 'intersect' functionality in it's masking?

    • @ScottDavenport
      @ScottDavenport  Před 2 lety

      ON1 doesn't have intersection, although if you apply a Luminosity mask first, fiddle with the Window/Level slider, and then apply a Masking Bug with the Edges shape, you can zero-in on segments of a photo. Add in some brushing and you're close to what you see here.

  • @NakedInSeattle
    @NakedInSeattle Před 2 lety +2

    I use the clone stamp tool (darken). It works wonderfully.

    • @ScottDavenport
      @ScottDavenport  Před 2 lety

      Hi Larry ... yep, another method. Always good to have more tools in the toolbox.

  • @usablellc6735
    @usablellc6735 Před rokem

    This was interesting. I use Steve Arnold's technique in Photoshop. It involves creating a mask and using the clone stamp tool.

    • @ScottDavenport
      @ScottDavenport  Před rokem

      Sure... clone/stamp is another approach. In the end, it's the photo that matters, not the tools used to achieve it. :) Have fun!

  • @86BBUB
    @86BBUB Před rokem

    Nice video. Pescadero Point? I think I took the same photo - LOL.

  • @jayplatt8798
    @jayplatt8798 Před rokem

    Scott Kelby teaches a trick to use the clone stamp tool set to darken in Photoshop. It works reasonably well, but it is destructive. Your method is much cleaner.

    • @ScottDavenport
      @ScottDavenport  Před rokem

      Clone stamp is another tool in the toolbox. Sometimes, that has to get used, too. When I can, I do prefer the non-destructive approaches.

  • @thetiktokman
    @thetiktokman Před rokem

    Way way way too much talking head. Study documentary filmmaking.