why is it that selective colouring and hdr seem to be taboo with more experienced togs i dont understande whats wrong with it if you like. you like it.not looking for a argument i just wondered . sorry for hijacking the thread
does that mean your HAILED AS A CREATIVE VISIOARY because you dont use or like it

why is it that selective colouring and hdr seem to be taboo with more experienced togs i dont understande whats wrong with it if you like. you like it.not looking for a argument i just wondered . sorry for hijacking the thread
I like it and use it, as for saying it's already been done well so have half the photo's we take but we still take them!!!!
I like it and use it, as for saying it's already been done well so have half the photo's we take but we still take them!!!!
well said sunsets are one but there still nice. alot of the time people put hdr up on the forum and they apologize for doing so when they have put time and effort in to it only for some one to come on and say only people who use hdr are cr@p at photography .people like me who have alot to learn look up to people with a lot of posts and when they say that they willnot try what they would have probly like to have ago at. it also puts some off commenting in case they look stupidits coments like this that put people off Because everyone's done it at some point, the internet is over-saturated with selectively saturated images, and it looks shocking. Also a lot of bad photographers use it to try to jazz up their photos in lieu of any genuine talent.

well said sunsets are one but there still nice. alot of the time people put hdr up on the forum and they apologize for doing so when they have put time and effort in to it only for some one to come on and say only people who use hdr are cr@p at photography .people like me who have alot to learn look up to people with a lot of posts and when they say that they willnot try what they would have probly like to have ago at. it also puts some off commenting in case they look stupidits coments like this that put people off Because everyone's done it at some point, the internet is over-saturated with selectively saturated images, and it looks shocking. Also a lot of bad photographers use it to try to jazz up their photos in lieu of any genuine talent.
Don't use the eraser. You can't go back without potentially losing a lot of work. And you can't alter your edits.QUOTE]
I don't understand what you are saying here James. I always keep the original file and because selective colouring is generally only a very small part of the picture it probably takes no more than a couple of minutes to do. It's easy enough to take a step while your editing.
Don't use the eraser. You can't go back without potentially losing a lot of work. And you can't alter your edits.QUOTE]
I don't understand what you are saying here James. I always keep the original file and because selective colouring is generally only a very small part of the picture it probably takes no more than a couple of minutes to do. It's easy enough to take a step while your editing.
Say you go 'outside the lines' a tiny bit whilst erasing, ie you reveal colour in an area next to what you want. You have to undo it. Which, if you've been doing a particularly long brush stroke could mean having to redo quite a bit. If you were using a layer mask, you could switch to white (or black depending what you're doing) and just touch up the edge.
You also have the options of all the greys inbetween black and white for feathering much more accurately than using opacity on an eraser.
Now, say you saved the PSD file, then later on you want to alter what's in colour. You can't you have to start again. Had you done it with a layer mask, you could add and remove the colour at will. This becomes even more of an issue if you have more and more layers of different edits involved in the image.
Layer masks also offer you a myriad of different options for edge refinement, doing levels adjustments, etc on the mask to control down to the last pixel what is and isn't affected.
There is actually a tutorial here on the forum which colin wrote, using colour popping to explain how to use layer masks, might be worth having a read.
http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=37165
There is also an iphone app to do such a thing