Lightroom Quick Tip: Using the Tone Curve for Ideal Saturation (VIDEO)
Properly saturated colors can make or break a photo: Too much color makes images appear unnatural, while not enough may result in a dull or boring image. This quick Lightroom tutorial reveals an often ignored Light tool that enables you to quickly achieve the perfect compromise.
It’s all about a problem you may confront when using Lightroom’s Curves tools to add Contrast or manage light or dark tones. By doing do it’s easy to unwittingly increase saturation across the board in a way that can be quite counterproductive.
According to instructor John Pedersen, the secret is understanding Lightroom’s little-known Refine Saturation slider to remedy an unwanted boost when introducing Contrast with the Tone Curve. Pedersen is a professional landscape photographer, author, and educator based in the Pacific Northwest.
This technique is accessible to beginners and pros alike, and Pedersen describes the concept like this: “You can always go back in and play with the basic Saturation slider and do some other funky stuff to tone things down. But the Refine Saturation slider mimics Photoshop’s powerful Blend modes to manage excess Saturation with far more precision and control.”
Pedersen jumps into Lightroom and provides a tour of this feature in less than five minutes so that you can start using it today. If this tool doesn’t appear in your version of Lightroom Pedersen explains how to update the software so that this transformational slider is right at your fingertips.
The demonstration image is a nicely composed, unedited landscape scene captured in the Eastern Sierras with a placid lake in the foreground and colorful trees further back that are reflected in the water. The problem is that these reflections are too muted to be impactful, and the overall shot needs more Contrast and “punch.”
Pedersen opens Lightroom’s Tone Curve panel and walks you through the step-by-step process for rehabilitating his photo to perfection. And the good news is that you can employ this workflow to significantly enhance just about any image you capture in the great outdoors.
The process is so quick and easy that we’ll let Pedersen illustrate how it works, rather than summarizing it here. Once you’re done, pay a visit to his popular YouTube channel where there are many more instructional videos to be found.
And don’t miss the recent tutorial we featured with another adept instructor who demonstrates how to rid photographs of ugly “polarization blobs” when you take things too far with your lens filter.