How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos [Photography]

By Adam Dachis, LifehackerAugust 24, 2010 at 12:00PM

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos Black and white has long been the default “artistic” style for photographs, so it can be easy to forget how compelling a color photograph can be. Here’s an in-depth guide to help you get amazing color in your photos.

An Introduction to Color

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos We could talk for hours about the science of color and how it works, but that’s only going to go so far in helping you with your photos, so we’ll save it for another time. Instead, let’s just have a quick chat about the color wheel and what we can do with it.

Types of Color

Before we can get into using color, we have to have a basic understanding of the types. So let’s breeze through this so we can get to the fun stuff.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Primary colors are colors at their most basic level. We mix primary colors together to make the other colors. Here we have red, yellow, and blue. On the computer we’re actually dealing with red, green, and blue (RGB) as our primaries, but that’s not really relevant for what we want to do here: create nice color harmonies.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Wow, those secondary colors look ugly together. In most cases, most color groupings don’t look fantastic when shown together. They tend to look better with colors outside of their group. But what are secondary colors? When you mate two of the primary colors, you end up with a secondary. For example, yellow and blue makes green—but you probably already knew that.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Tertiary colors are the third generation—the grandchildren of the primary colors…except that’s a bad analogy because you make tertiary colors by combining a primary and a secondary color—and that kind of breeding is frowned on almost anywhere you go.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
These are colors that complement each other. (Did you figure that out already?) If you’re looking at the color wheel, they’re the colors directly across from one another. They’re supposed to look nice together but that’s not always the case.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Analogous colors are the colors located in close proximity on the color wheel. In a simplified color wheel like the one shown above, they’re directly next to each other. On a color wheel with more colors than your eye can count, they don’t need to be strict neighbors—just pretty close. Using an analogous color (or two) instead of a direct complement can sometimes make for a better color harmony:

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos

At least I think so, anyway. Color can be a very personal thing, so you want to choose harmonies you enjoy. Even if you don’t think you have a preference, you probably do. Color is one of the first things we connect with when we’re young. Think about how many times you were asked, “What’s your favorite color, Sammy?” If your name was Sammy, you probably heard that question a lot.

So if color is such a personal thing, how do we make appealing color harmonies? Well, there are really only so many basic colors to work with and there are some general principles (some of which we’ve now covered) that can help to guide you. Let’s look at some examples and pick them apart.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Why do red and cyan work well together? Red is our primary color in this bunch and cyan is a tertiary color. Cyan is also a split complement of red. You get a split complement when you take a color, find it’s complement, and then choose one of the complement’s analogous colors. In this case red’s compeiment is green. Cyan is analogous to green and therefore is a split complement. Of course, what you’re looking at here isn’t exactly red or exactly cyan, plus there are tonal shifts, but the concept is still the same.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Good old blue and green, the colors of my high school. The problem is that my high school used really obnoxious combinations of the two. In fact, while this looks alright, it’s not necessarily the most compelling. The problem is that the colors are really close together on the wheel. They’re practically analogous. While they look alright together, and could be very compelling in some cases, there’s not a lot of variation going on here. Let’s see what else we can do…

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
This is interesting. Here we have the blue and green with orange and red. Orange and red are also very close together on the color wheel, having the same sort of relationship as blue and green. While they might not always be compelling combinations alone, they’re pretty nice when the four are combined. If you’re looking at the color wheel, you may have noticed these four colors form a rectangle. When looking for a starting point for basic color harmonies, drawing shapes on the color wheel can help.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Lastly, let’s take a look at something that’s probably pretty familiar. These are the colors of Flickr, and they were derived from a triad. A triad is an equilateral triangle drawn on the color wheel. If you’re playing along, you’ll notice if you connect magenta and cyan, the missing link in the triangle is yellow-orange:

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
The Flickr colors are based in this triad, but orange was dropped for a simpler harmony. If you only want two dominant colors, try playing around with triads and removing one color for some interesting options.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Before we move on, we have to talk about Adobe Kuler. If you’re looking for a way to find new color harmonies, Kuler is a great (free) web-based tool to help you look at color in different ways.

That said, how does all of this apply to photography?

Color Theory in Photography

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Now we’re knee deep in the water and so I have to ask: Have you ever taken a picture of a body of water during a sunset? I have. You’re probably looking at it right now, since it’s right above this sentence. It’s not going to win any awards for Best Sunset Photo or even make it onto the cover of a trashy novel, but it does illustrate a point about color: Color harmonies can show up naturally in the most regular of places. The orange of the sun and the blue of the sky complement each other. If you don’t happen to have a lake and a sky handy, dress up one of your caucasian (or mostly caucasian) friends in blue jeans and a white t-shirt. That’s a popular combination because white people are really more orange than white—especially if they’re jaundiced. If you have a jaundiced friend, or at least one with a spray tan, go buy a pair of jeans and you’re set for life.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Do you think this spray tanning room has blue walls by accident? Neither do I.

Spray tanning isn’t the only industry taking advantage of color harmonies. America’s plastered with an idea we’ve already discussed:

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Before Flickr there was the US of A. This is the same dropping-a-color-from-a-triad concept, only less saturated. Flickr’s color scheme is secretly patriotic. Who knew?

But what does this all mean? It means there are color harmonies everywhere you go, and you need to look for them. Capturing a photo with good color can be as simple as aiming the lens in the right direction, framing up, and pressing the shutter. But this is the digital age, so let’s look at how we can manipulate reality for better photos when reality just doesn’t live up to the task.

Before the Shutter

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Don’t get too excited. Most of what you can do to manipulate color for the good of your photo before pressing the shutter is thinking and planning. Sorry, there’s not a lot of magic here.

Subjects and Backgrounds

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
This is easier than you think. Just like the spray-tanner against the blue wall, it can be as simple as placing your subject in front of the color you want. In the photo above, I placed my friend Christine in front of a white wall that gained a green tint from some glass that’s out of frame. Christine’s skin is yellow-orange and her lips are pink. Basically, Christine forms a split complement of green.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Remember the rectangle example from earlier? Here it is in practice. We have analogous warm shades on the ground (orange and red) and analogous cool shades behind the trees (green and blue).

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Here’s another example of split complements at work. See the tiny piece of yellow on that foam football? The purple and cyan are its split complements.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Obvious complements aren’t the only solution, however. You can create some beautiful color harmonies simply by sticking with analogous colors and shifts in tone. This is one of those situations where green and blue—two very similar colors—can work subtly together to create a nice effect.

The takeaway here is pretty simple: Put your subject in front of a background that will create a color harmony, or change your subject to suit the background you have. It doesn’t matter if your subject is a human female or a foam football, the principles stay the same.

Light

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos
Color doesn’t always look the same and that’s because of light. Light can often be a huge nuisance, whether you have plenty of it or not enough. We’re not going to get into lighting here, but we do need to touch upon its effects on color. As you can see in the example above, the color of the subjects benefits from some extra read light. You can see it the most on their skin. This is just a casual snapshot, but the color pops because of the light. This light came from the same sun as less richly colorful photos taken earlier in the day, but because the sun had begun to set at the time the photo was taken, the lighting was more direct (instead of overhead). Around sunrise and sunset are the two times during the day when you get the best outdoor light and, by extension, the best natural outdoor color. Both of these periods are referred to as the golden hours. Make use of them when you can. Use a calculator if you need to.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos Chances are you’re not scheduling your family vacation photos around the golden hours of the day, so how can you take advantage of the light you have? In terms of color, you want to be aware of the temperature. You may have noticed a little chart to our left. This gives you the idea of the light temperature (and therefore color cast) you can expect at certain times of the day. Pretty handy. When you’re indoors, artificial light changes as well. Tungsten lighting will get you that nice yellow-orange glow you can get from the sun. Fluorescent lights—everybody’s (least) favorite—produce a fairly dull white light with a little extra green. Whatever your lighting situation may be, know what it is. It will have an effect on the color in your photo.

Color temperature chart from ePhotoZine

Tricks In Post

You can’t fix everything by post processing your photos—not easily, anyhow—but there are a lot of neat things you can do. Now that you know how to use color, let’s look at abusing it.

There are a lot of clever Photoshop tutorials out there dealing with color and just about everything else you might want to do to your photos. Generally they deal with using the tools exactly as they were intended and involve quite a bit of work. This section isn’t about best practices, but about getting the job done quickly and still doing it well. These tricks are about getting some neat color effects, from subtle to extreme, without too many steps or anything all that complicated. Although Donnie is much more entertaining, here’s a little information on some of the adjustments we’ll be looking at so you know what you’re getting into.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos

Not too bad, right?

Unbalanced Color with the Curves Midpoint Gray Eyedropper

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos

Most of the time you probably want to white balance your photos, but sometimes unbalanced color works in your favor. Sometimes added warmth or a lack of saturation can give a picture the effect you’re looking for, so let’s take a look at using the midpoint gray eyedropper in Curves to get some unbalanced color effects.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos What the midpoint gray eyedropper does is sample a color in the photo and then change the color balance of the entire photo to neutralize it so it will be a neutral, middle-of-the-road (or, well, tonal scale) gray. If you were to use it to select something blue, for example, the sampling would cause curves to neutralize it using that color’s complement. Most blues will get you an orange-ish complement and so you’ll see your photo warm up. If you select a warmer color, it’ll cool down your photos. This is a really fast way to change the feel of your photo with color complements.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos

Warming up or cooling off your photos—or adding any color, really—can be done pretty quickly and easily using a faux-Photo Filter adjustment instead. So why use Curves? Curves gives you more control and you can tweak the settings after you’ve discovered them with the sampler. You can also make your own adjustments to the contrast after playing with the color, letting you do all of your work in one place. If you’re not sure how to adjust individual color channels with Curves, check out the next section for a trick for getting extreme color effects using—you guessed it—individual color channels.

Split Color Dominance for Extreme Color with Curves

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos

Curves is a very powerful tool, and it’s easy to abuse that power—so let’s do it! You can create some really interesting color effects by splitting which channels are dominant in your photos.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos This is really easy to do, but daunting if you haven’t tried it before. To get started, either hit Command/Control + M to bring up Curves or go to the Layer menu, choose New Adjustment Layer, and then select Curves. From there you’ll see something along the lines of what’s in the picture to the left. In that picture, I have the blue channel selected. Chances are you have the RGB layer selected, since that’s the default. (Note: if you’re not using RGB you may have different channel names.) From the channel menu, select Red. We’ll start there and work our way down.

Adjusting Light and Color with Gradient Overlays

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos

Subtlety is not the strong suit of either of those tricks. If you want to show a little more restraint but still adjust color in an interesting way, gradient overlays might be your cup of tea.

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos The idea is pretty simple:

  1. Create a new layer on top of your photo.
  2. Use the Gradient tool (it swaps with the Paint Can in the toolbar) to create a gradient to fill the layer.
  3. Set the blending mode of your gradient layer to Overlay.
  4. Adjust the opacity of that layer to get the desired effect (less is generally more in this case).

In the example video above you can see how using a radial gradient can create a subtle, cooling spotlight to make the photo’s subject pop out with the right color.

Adjusting Light and Color with Color Channel Overlays

How to Get the Best Color Out of Your Photos

This is one of the easiest tricks to do and generally one of the most compelling. All you do is take a single color channel from your photo, paste it in a new layer above the full color photo, and set the blending mode of that layer to Overlay. This gives you a nice, washed out and contrasty color look. Here’s how you do it, step-by-step:

  1. Open up your photo and switch to the Channels panel in Photoshop. RGB should be selected, but choose Green.
  2. Select All (Command/Control + A) and then copy (Command/Control + C).
  3. Switch back to RGB and then paste (Command/Control + V) the green layer on top of your photo. This should make everything appear to be in black and white.
  4. Set the blending mode of the green layer you just pasted to Overlay and adjust the opacity to your liking (but 20-30% usually works pretty well).

Got any great color tricks? Let’s hear ’em in the comments!

Use a Post-It Note for Easy Post-Drilling Cleanup [Clever Uses]

By Jason Fitzpatrick, LifehackerAugust 24, 2010 at 11:00AM

Use a Post-It Note for Easy Post-Drilling CleanupLifehacker reader cking777 shares a simple but effective use for Post-It notes to catch the dust from drywall drilling and make cleanup a snap.

When drilling in drywall, stick a post-it underneath the drill, folded to catch all the dust. Then just throw away.

Doesn’t get much more simple than that. For another clever way to contain the mess of drilling, check out how to use an old DVD spindle to control the spray of shavings from a paddle bit. Have your own tip for easy post-DIY cleanup? Let’s hear about it in the comments. Thanks cking777!

Nmap Developers Release a Picture of the Web

By Soulskill, SlashdotAugust 23, 2010 at 03:40PM

iago-vL writes “The Nmap Project recently posted an awesome visualization of the top million site icons (favicons) on the Web, sized by relative popularity of sites. This project used the Nmap Scripting Engine, which is capable of performing discovery, vulnerability detection, and anything else you can imagine with lightning speed. We saw last month how an Nmap developer downloaded 170 million Facebook names, and this month it’s a million favicons; I wonder what they’ll do next?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

10 Best Websites For Free Audio Books

By Saikat Basu, MakeUseOfAugust 23, 2010 at 02:31PM

free audio booksBusy times call for some workarounds. One of the distinct advantages of audio books over its more physical form is that it saves time. Audio books take away a sliver of fun from the enjoyment of a book, but if the voiceover is well done, it makes up for it.

With the explosion of personal media players like iPods and even mobile phones which can carry media files, even a routine walk can be turned into an education.

Not all books are good for easy listening. Audio books on goal setting and motivation lend themselves well to listening while walking. That’s not to say you can’t enjoy an audio narration of a novel or even a bit of poetry.


The search for audio books may not always get you the title you want. Even then, you can get a few gems when you go searching. So, where do you go searching for free audio books to download and enjoy?

The following ten audio book websites, of course.

Booksshouldbefree

free audio books

At this address you get free audio books in multiple genres and languages. You can check out the Top 100, drill through the genres, or use the Google search at the top to get the free audio book for download.

Downloads are available in mp3 and iTunes format. The books are mostly classical literature and very well organized with reviews and a small preview. You can also check out the Wikipedia links on the book and the author.

NewFiction

free audio book downloads

NewFiction.com is one of the better ‘lookers’ in the class of free audio book websites. Perhaps, because it’s about ‘iSoaps’ or fictionalized stories delivered in episodes daily. Stories are voiced by trained dramatic actors for your aural appeal.

You can subscribe to the ‘iSoaps’ and play episodes online, get it as a podcast, or download it to your PC or your portable device (iPod, cell phone etc).

ThoughtAudio

free audio book downloads

ThoughtAudio is a neat little audio book website with a neat collection of classical works. You can listen to them online or download them in segments. You can also view the written text of some of the books as a PDF download.

LibriVox

free audio book downloads

Our previous thorough review on LibriVox covers this audio book website. LibriVox is a repository of free audio books in the public domain. It is a volunteer driven site, where enthusiasts record freely available books and make them available as MP3 downloads or podcasts.

You can also volunteer to be a reader, no qualifications other than an audible voice is necessary. You can search through the collection using the catalog search on the site. An advanced search option is also available.

Podiobooks

free online audio books

Podiobooks is a similar episodic audio rendition of free audio books as podcasts. Like lot of podcasts, you can receive them as RSS feeds or download them directly. The number of categories is well covered from alternative history to chick lit and satire. The audio book site has about 434 titles in its stock.

Open Culture

free online audio books

Audio books are just one of the sections covered on this site which focuses on educational media collected from other sites. You get to download free courses from universities in MP3 format, language lessons as podcasts, and a variety of other podcasts that cover subjects like technology, travel, music, science, and more.

Learn Out Loud

free online audio books

LearnOutLoud.com is a well designed and large collection of audio books. Their catalog has 25,000 audio and video titles in a mixture of paid and free. You can click on the tab marked as Free Stuff to access the free audio books that are available for download with a right click.

All usual genres are well represented. For instance, if you are into self development, you have 425 titles to choose from. All titles are rated and reviewed.

Project Gutenberg

Project Gutenberg is the ongoing effort to digitize and archive cultural works in the form of eBooks. It also works in co-operation with websites like LibriVox and AudioBooksForFree for creating audio books. As a result, you can browse through their comprehensive list of human and machine read audio books.

You can go through the list alphabetically for author and title. Audio books are also available in a number of languages. But the quicker way would be to use the Advanced Search page.

Storynory

A free audio book site especially for children is a nice little place for classic children stories like ‘A Christmas Carol’, fairy tales ‘Aesop’, educational stories that cover The Bible or history, and lots of other original stuff. You can download a free audio story every week.

Librophile

free audio books

The interface at first glance appears a bit off-the-wall. Then you realize that it’s a search tool for eBooks. Librophile collects and displays eBooks mostly from LibriVox and Audible. Click on the Free button and then go through the listings.

A mouseover over the thumbnail cover gives you a sketchy summary. You can download the free audio books as a ZIP file, play it in the browser, or check it out as a readable eBook. Clicking on a title takes you to the Audible or LibriVox website.

Do you have any other free audio book site to add to the list? Personally, I have found audio books to be the best way to beat traffic jams. What about you?

Image Credit: PlayfulLibrarian

 

 

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Medieval Copy Protection: I Put A Curse On You

By Mike Masnick, Techdirt.September 08, 2010 at 10:12AM

Slashdot points us to this wonderful blog post on the Got Medieval blog about how monks and scribes in the middle ages “copy protected” their books with “book curses” inscribed within the book.

I almost wonder if those were more effective than today’s DRM attempts.

The blog has a nice image of one such curse, but here are a couple that I find amusing:


Should anyone by craft of any device whatever abstract this book from this place may his soul suffer, in retribution for what he has done, and may his name be erased from the book of the living and not recorded among the Blessed.

–attributed to a 16th-century French missal belonging to a man named Robert

Thys boke is one
And Godes kors ys anoder;
They take the ton,
God gefe them the toder.

[This book is one (thing),
And God’s curse is another;
They that take the one,
God gives them the other.]

–found in various Middle English books.

Perhaps the most clever one though, is described as follows:


But far and away my favorite curse is found in a collection of English court transcripts made by William Easingwold around 1491. It takes the form of a clever Latin code. If you read the top two lines together it says “May he who wrote this book procure the joys of life supernal”, but the bottom two together produce “May he who steals this book endure the pangs of death infernal” (Drogin’s translation). I don’t have an image of the manuscript, but this is a close approximation:



All of this reminds me of an even older story of books and attempts to stop copying, which we wrote about last year, concerning Saint Columba — also known as Colmcille or Colum Cille — who in the 6th century, decided to copy some religious books in an attempt to “share” the faith with others. He did so with a Latin translation of the Bible and it created quite the mess, with a debate over the legality of copying a book, and whether or not it counted as “property.” You see, these arguments aren’t particularly new…

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