Overall an excellent bit of content. Some of this is a bit beyond me at the moment. Not the mechanics, but the ability to recognize some of the details that you pointed out. Regardless, it's just something for me to practice. I'm actually surprised at the number of dislikes on this video. I would have expected at least a few comments to explain why someone might have downvoted the video. In any case...Thanks very much for some really interesting content.
Christian, I have difficulties in understanding Color Mixer of today’s tutorial, in the way that two features of Hue and Saturation, particularly with Yellow and Green Hue in minus, then in plus in Saturation. This connection between those two makes me feel puzzled. I thank you in advance!
Hue changes the color, moving the greens toward yellow or blue, for instance stance. Saturation changes the intensity of the hue, how bold the color is.
Hey Nancy, sorry for the delayed response! As mentioned by the commenters below hue changes the color, so when I bring down the green hue ALL green tones will shift towards yellow. If I bring UP the green hue, all green tones would shift towards cyan / aqua. The saturation is just for the color intensity, so bringing it up will make the colors stronger :-)
@@ThePhlogPhotography Christian, thank you so much for your very kind words! You helped me greatly in this issue! I understood more than ever before. I am grateful to you!
Thank you for your tutorials Christian. I am curious as to why you did not subtract the sky from the radial gradient that you placed around the trees. Any particular reason for not doing it? Thanks.
Thank you for the comment! Since its not that big of an adjustments I didnt think its needed to subtract the sky, but if you want to be more precise, subtracting the sky from that radial gradient is the way to go!
When I bring down the highlights I take out very harsh (almost like clipping) bright spots of the image but overall everything gets a bit darker, to counter that I increase the whites to bring back brightness without introducing harsh lights
@ThePhlogPhotography thanks. That still seems like it's the wrong way round to me: I thought the whites are the brightest part that needs reducing to prevent clipping, rather than highlights, but you know a lot more than me.
Overall an excellent bit of content. Some of this is a bit beyond me at the moment. Not the mechanics, but the ability to recognize some of the details that you pointed out. Regardless, it's just something for me to practice.
I'm actually surprised at the number of dislikes on this video. I would have expected at least a few comments to explain why someone might have downvoted the video. In any case...Thanks very much for some really interesting content.
Thanks for the comment! Its bound to happen when a video gets a few hundred views there will be downvotes, but thats totally fine! :-)
Really like your vids. Keep up the good work. Great that someone just tries to educate and inform withouit trying to sell something.
Another insightful video, Christian. Thanks!
Super helpful...
You do a great tutorial🙂
Thanks a lot!
Excellent ❤
Köszönjük!
Thank you so much for your support!
hello
you are a master of light in lightroom, we follow you with great interest and your explanations are clear, thank you for sharing
@+
Thanks a lot!
Hi
Will you turn on Polish subtitles?
Hey, not sure how this works, but I will look into it once I find the time!
@ThePhlogPhotography Thanks 👍🙂
ThankYou!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :) :) :)
Christian, I have difficulties in understanding Color Mixer of today’s tutorial, in the way that two features of Hue and Saturation, particularly with Yellow and Green Hue in minus, then in plus in Saturation. This connection between those two makes me feel puzzled. I thank you in advance!
Hue changes the color, moving the greens toward yellow or blue, for instance stance. Saturation changes the intensity of the hue, how bold the color is.
As mentioned above
Hue - Tone of the color
Saturation - Amount of the color
Hey Nancy, sorry for the delayed response! As mentioned by the commenters below hue changes the color, so when I bring down the green hue ALL green tones will shift towards yellow. If I bring UP the green hue, all green tones would shift towards cyan / aqua. The saturation is just for the color intensity, so bringing it up will make the colors stronger :-)
@@ThePhlogPhotography Christian, thank you so much for your very kind words! You helped me greatly in this issue! I understood more than ever before. I am grateful to you!
@@jones3586 Thank you so much for your help! It is very inspiring to me, I understood well.
Thank you for your tutorials Christian. I am curious as to why you did not subtract the sky from the radial gradient that you placed around the trees. Any particular reason for not doing it? Thanks.
Thank you for the comment! Since its not that big of an adjustments I didnt think its needed to subtract the sky, but if you want to be more precise, subtracting the sky from that radial gradient is the way to go!
Can you please explain why did you use HDR when the histogram of the initial image wasn’t even touching either of its ends?
For this photo HDR wasnt really needed, I did it anyways just to be save and I already had taken the HDR bracket :)
How do you upload a photo you were working on Lightroom to Lightroom classic ??
Not sure about that, I havent used the reduced Lightroom version in a long time, I basically only use LrC
Why minus Highlights but plus Whites? Seems like both would always need to go in the same direction to me...
When I bring down the highlights I take out very harsh (almost like clipping) bright spots of the image but overall everything gets a bit darker, to counter that I increase the whites to bring back brightness without introducing harsh lights
@ThePhlogPhotography thanks. That still seems like it's the wrong way round to me: I thought the whites are the brightest part that needs reducing to prevent clipping, rather than highlights, but you know a lot more than me.