A couple of weeks ago I mentioned an Adobe Photoshop "Action" that I use to enhance my cell phone photographs. That Action, known as "Smaragdify," was created by Dave Ward and is available from Adobe for free.
Here are the steps to follow to start using this action:
Step 1) Download Smaragdify Action: Adobe Smaragdify
To use the Action after you have downloaded it to your computer, do the following:
Step 2) Place Smaragdify in PhotoShop Action folder: Unzip the download and you will have a single file named Smaragdify. Find your Adobe Photoshop program folder. Within that folder is a folder named "Presets." Open Presets and find the folder named "Photoshop Actions" and place Smaragdify in that folder.
Click and hold the little black triangle on the top right side of the Action window. This will launch the menu.
The Action is now loaded. You are now ready to use this Action to enhance your photos. But first you must know that this Action will create a layer for each enhancement it makes -- but the layers are not flattened, so you can modify any aspect of the enhancements. Don't worry. It will make sense once we go through an example.
Step 1) Crop and use Curves: I cropped the photo a bit to eliminate the distracting specular highlight created by the safety line on the far left. Then I used Curves to boost the contrast, bring out some highlights, and make the blacks blacker. Just using Curves also brought out the blue and gold in they sky and water.
Step 2) Make a Snapshot: First, make a Snapshot of this spot in the enhancement journey. In the History window, click the little camera icon. You have just created Snapshot 1. No matter what changes you make from this point on, you can always come back to this Snapshot. (And we will come back when we use the History Brush.)
I turn-off three of the layers. This eliminates the sepia, the grayscale, and noise the Action creates. Doing this saturates the colors to a point I like.
To turn-off a layer you don't like, just click the box that has the eye. (To turn it back on, just click on the same box again.)
If you like, play with each layer. Just double-click it and a window will pop for that specific effect.
I just leave the layers as they are -- and turn off the three I mentioned.
Step 8) Make another Snapshot: This will be labeled Snapshot 3. Why not 2? Because one of the mini-actions in Smaragdify made a Snapshot.
Step 9. History Brush to restore sharpness: Smaragdify applies a Gaussian Blur to the image in a somewhat mysterious fashion. There are times the blur is too much for faces for items I want to be sharp. To correct this I use the History Brush.
It gets a little tricky to explain how this works. To use the History Brush, we use the two Snapshots created earlier. We will paint from Snapshot 1 onto Snapshot 3.In effect replacing pixels from one Snapshot with those from another.
On the Tool Window, click the History Brush
Here is my final image. I like the dark edges that Smaragdify adds. It creates a mood that I like, gives my cell phone images a style, and masks the poor quality of the camera.
Send us some of your images that you have enhanced using Smaragdify!
- Cliff
2 comments:
Cliff you also need to straighten the horizon :).
Betty
Cliff, I don't think the horizon needs straightening, that would ruin the effect of sailing.
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