A quick demonstration of how I edit my interior photos. Edited first in Lightroom and then Photoshop. www.elisecott.studio Instagram: @elisescott.studio
I can't image doing something like this for 40/50/60 photos and maybe in a day I photograph three different houses. The result is nice certainly, but when you have some rhythms it's unthinkable to edit like this every single picture and with 24h deadlines!
Nice use of the replace colour tool, I’ll have to try it out next time I’m doing the same. Neutralising colour casts is what I actually spend most time resolving in post, every day’s a school day!
@cata_jpg I think I was confused because the line work was so accurate. When I use the lasso tool it seems to have a mind of its own and is never as perfect on the edges as in this video.
@@xTw1sTeDK1LLAx There's two types of lasso tool - one of them is kind of crazy and draws a selection based on the pixels. The one she's using is the Polygonal Lasson Tool. In your tool bar, if you click down on the Lasso Tool the other tool options will appear there. Hope this helps!
Yep? Doin things the Hard way. ACR in photoshop is a better option than lightroom and adjustment layers are easier to work with and to reverse if you have been editing too long and and loose a bit of visual calibration
@@elisescott2252 Agreed The image looks great. As photographers we learn every day and evolve all the time. Thanks for spending the time to make the video.
Why work nondestructively when the client doesn't care about color accuracy :D I wouldn't say ACR is a better option than LR. It's not one or the other. They compliment each other well. LR is basically ACR with more functionality with archiving, culling, and exporting. The only thing that sucks is how LAGGY LR is.
Hi Megan! The main reason I use the replace colour tool is to turn yellow/brown tones in to white by reducing the saturation. For instance at 1:29, I reduced the saturation of the brown tones on the cabinets as these are actually white in real life. This helps make the room feel brighter with more ‘real whites’. I hope this makes sense 😊
Hey there! Thanks for your comment? Just wondering what you mean by this? I create a second layer so I can always revert back to the original file incase I don't like the changes. Is that what you mean?
I don’t really find it necessary to create too many layers for each step, I do an adjustment, then make sure I like it and move on. I hope that answers the question 😊
@@elisescott2252 - I don’t think OP’s comment was a question so much as a constructive suggestion: non-destructive editing is generally considered a best practice. And while there certainly isn’t a “wrong” way to use Photoshop, this workflow ignores some pretty major technical and quality of life benefits for seemingly no reason that I could tell. That said, your final product looks amazing, so props for that.
Too bad you can’t edit decompression distortion which makes this interior look like a bowling lane. It’s wasted effort on a bad perspective and focal length.
THANK YOU. quick and easy no bs. glad to see not everyone is an HDR hater :D
I can't image doing something like this for 40/50/60 photos and maybe in a day I photograph three different houses.
The result is nice certainly, but when you have some rhythms it's unthinkable to edit like this every single picture and with 24h deadlines!
Replace color tool is a game changer, thank you Elise! You´ve save my future photoshoots! Have a good work! Bye :)
Nice use of the replace colour tool, I’ll have to try it out next time I’m doing the same. Neutralising colour casts is what I actually spend most time resolving in post, every day’s a school day!
Awesome! The replace colour tool is probably one of my favourites 👌🏼
This is what I want to see! 🔥 Thanks
Funny how RUclips recommend me randomly a very good video. Thanks to you I’m gonna reach another level of editing !
Aw thanks Jason! Appreciate the comment :)
Very talented!
Great videos. I'd like to see them slower with sound instructions to hear your creative process. Many thanks.
Thanks for the edit.
Quick and simple
No way you have only that many subscribers I subbed good quality content
Aww thank you! :) appreciate it
Interesting to see how other people edit their photos.
Nice result! What type of camera you perfer using for photography?
Amazing
I’m your 700th subscriber
Hi great video! Which camera do you use?
this vid just saved my life for real, one question tho, is it possible to somehow save these edits as preset option?
yes 😊
Why did you edit third shot, not split HDR in PS?
wow
And you do this on all your pictures?
I shoot 2 properties a week with 50 to 60 pictures each.
do you merge RAW or Jpeg pics?
Hi! I always make sure I shoot in RAW, image quality is much better.
Nice video, but too fast, thanks for sharing.
What is the name of that tool you used to outline all the furniture and floor?
Its the Lasso Tool in Photoshop. Its used to make selections like the pen tool but quicker.
@cata_jpg I think I was confused because the line work was so accurate. When I use the lasso tool it seems to have a mind of its own and is never as perfect on the edges as in this video.
@@xTw1sTeDK1LLAx There's two types of lasso tool - one of them is kind of crazy and draws a selection based on the pixels. The one she's using is the Polygonal Lasson Tool. In your tool bar, if you click down on the Lasso Tool the other tool options will appear there. Hope this helps!
@cata_jpg definitely going to look into it later! Should help speed things along once I swap to the Poly Lasso. Appreciate the tips!
Yep?
Doin things the Hard way. ACR in photoshop is a better option than lightroom and adjustment layers are easier to work with and to reverse if you have been editing too long and and loose a bit of visual calibration
Doing things the way I find give me the best result ☺️ cheers though
@@elisescott2252 Agreed The image looks great. As photographers we learn every day and evolve all the time. Thanks for spending the time to make the video.
Why work nondestructively when the client doesn't care about color accuracy :D
I wouldn't say ACR is a better option than LR. It's not one or the other. They compliment each other well. LR is basically ACR with more functionality with archiving, culling, and exporting.
The only thing that sucks is how LAGGY LR is.
I don't understand what she is doing with the replace color tool
Hi Megan! The main reason I use the replace colour tool is to turn yellow/brown tones in to white by reducing the saturation. For instance at 1:29, I reduced the saturation of the brown tones on the cabinets as these are actually white in real life. This helps make the room feel brighter with more ‘real whites’. I hope this makes sense 😊
u relly give me a new useful idea..........kissing........
Very cool, but very fast
Helpful if you go into the video playback settings and rewatch at 0.75 or 0.5 speed for some sections!
Why don't you do this non destructively?
Beautiful editing BTW, my photos always look like the before
Hey there! Thanks for your comment? Just wondering what you mean by this? I create a second layer so I can always revert back to the original file incase I don't like the changes. Is that what you mean?
@@elisescott2252 - Using masks and adjustment layers.
I don’t really find it necessary to create too many layers for each step, I do an adjustment, then make sure I like it and move on. I hope that answers the question 😊
@@elisescott2252 - I don’t think OP’s comment was a question so much as a constructive suggestion: non-destructive editing is generally considered a best practice. And while there certainly isn’t a “wrong” way to use Photoshop, this workflow ignores some pretty major technical and quality of life benefits for seemingly no reason that I could tell. That said, your final product looks amazing, so props for that.
Too bad you can’t edit decompression distortion which makes this interior look like a bowling lane. It’s wasted effort on a bad perspective and focal length.
Some clients love the overdramatic leading lines. I guess it depends what what the need for the shot was?