Post processing: Toning black and white images Adobe Photoshop / Color
This easy post-processing tutorial shows how to tone black and white images to give them an art approach. It can turn a rather boring image into something interesting.
It is best used for cityscapes, objects and still life.
Digital Black and White to be Like Film Adobe Photoshop / Photo Retouch
Simply desaturating a photograph doesn't really represent a true black & white film photo. The film has more impact, more puch and more life. A digital photo converted to black & white just doesn't cut it, it doesn't look real.
Introduction to White Balance Adobe Photoshop / Photography
White Balance is an aspect of photography that many digital camera owners don't understand or use - but it's something well worth learning about as it can have a real impact upon the shots you take.
ISO Settings in Digital Photography Adobe Photoshop / Photography
In Digital Photography ISO measures the sensitivity of the image sensor. The same principles apply as in film photography - the lower the number the less sensitive your camera is to light and the finer the grain.
White Balance Adobe Photoshop / Color
White Balance Photoshop TutorialExplore the three quick white balance correction techniques and learn how to manually calibrate the balance of each channel. White balance is a feature found in digital cameras to prevent colorcasts by adjusting the temperature of the photo. However, lighting variance and wrong white balance settings may produce colorcasts that require post processing.
Black and White Portrait Adobe Photoshop / Color
Use this tutorial to learn a quick and effective way of achieving a quality black and white conversion of a color photograph. This method will convert the photo without losing contrast, so it will look as if you shot on black and white film to begin with.
Introduction to Aperture in Digital Photography Adobe Photoshop / Photography
Digital Photography School » · Photography · September 13, 2006
Put most simply - Aperture is the size of the opening in the lens when a picture is taken. When you hit the shutter release button of your camera a hole opens up that allows your cameras image sensor to catch a glimpse of the scene you're wanting to capture. The aperture that you set impacts the size of that hole. The larger the hole the more light that gets in - the smaller the hole the less light.