jiloapp.blogg.se

Loading exposure x as plugin to photoshop
Loading exposure x as plugin to photoshop









It's unfortunate that there's no easy, EV-based dialog, but overall, the enhanced flexibility is arguably better anyway (in Photoshop too!). Try these on your own image with "preview" enabled and see what they do. Or, you may want this modification of the classic contrast-enhancing "S" curve, which is shifted a bit to add contrast while also pulling up the midtones: Which brings up the shadows a little bit, the midtones even more, and then has a rolloff preserving the highlights instead of clipping them. But, really, what you probably want is something like this:

loading exposure x as plugin to photoshop

Unfortunately, this interface doesn't give you anything to easily see numerically the amount of increase (let alone in a photography-related idiom like "stops" measured in EV). What you want, instead, is a mapping like this, which is effectively multiplying the brightness of each part of the image by a constant factor: This is, unfortunately, exactly the opposite of what you want to do to emulate the (non-motion related, of course - we'll take a static scene as a given!) effect of a longer exposure. The gray line from corner to corner is the existing file, and the black line is the new mapping. You'll get a Curves dialog similar to this:

loading exposure x as plugin to photoshop

That's a bit too bad for us photographers, but the fact is that such adjustments are really better done earlier in the workflow, ideally by getting the exposure right initially - or, failing that, in RAW development.Īnyway, you can see what the Gimp "Brightness" adjustment is doing by using the Brightness/Contrast control and setting the value to +100 brightness, then hitting "Edit as Levels" and in that tool hitting "Edit as Curves".

loading exposure x as plugin to photoshop

#Loading exposure x as plugin to photoshop software#

It appears that recently, the trend in Gimp has been to focus the software as more a graphics design and image manipulation tool rather than photo post-processing software. Gimp doesn't have an Exposure setting like that, which is kind of a lacking point, but on the other hand easily worked-around by using the curves tool instead.









Loading exposure x as plugin to photoshop