4 Ways to Set the White & Black Point in Lightroom
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- Опубликовано: 29 янв 2020
- In this video, I demonstrate four different ways you can set the white and black points in Lightroom. One way may work well on one image whereas a different way works better on a different image so it's good to know all four methods.
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You can watch the video on the Histogram here:
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Gear and settings used to capture the image in the video:
Nikon D850: amzn.to/2K498SZ
Nikon 24-70mm F2.8 Lens: amzn.to/2VQMKi9
Spider Pro handstrap (on D850): amzn.to/30k170u
Sony 120GB XQD Card: amzn.to/2HlfR8Y
Sony XQD/SD Card Reader: amzn.to/2NBuSHB
Aperture Priority Mode⠀
Auto-white Balance⠀⠀
Spot Metering - Metered on bricks below the statue⠀⠀
Single Point Focus - Focused on the statue⠀
1/200, F8.0, iso 64 at 50mm⠀
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If you're interested in Photoshop, Lightroom, Adobe Stock, and the Creative Cloud, you can find more info here:
bit.ly/2zwQ0nW
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telestream.pxf.io/DMrW2
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THANK YOU for watching!
In this video, I demonstrate four different ways you can set the white and black points in Lightroom. One way may work well on one image whereas a different way works better on a different image so it's good to know all four methods.
Please follow me on Instagram:
instagram.com/anthonymorganti/
You can watch the video on the Histogram here:
ruclips.net/video/yLGMwU-2ypc/видео.html
Gear and settings used to capture the image in the video:
Nikon D850: amzn.to/2K498SZ
Nikon 24-70mm F2.8 Lens: amzn.to/2VQMKi9
Spider Pro handstrap (on D850): amzn.to/30k170u
Sony 120GB XQD Card: amzn.to/2HlfR8Y
Sony XQD/SD Card Reader: amzn.to/2NBuSHB
Aperture Priority Mode⠀
Auto-white Balance⠀⠀
Spot Metering - Metered on bricks below the statue⠀⠀
Single Point Focus - Focused on the statue⠀
1/200, F8.0, iso 64 at 50mm⠀
Checkout my Recommended Gear List:
www.amazon.com/shop/anthonymorganti
If you're interested in Photoshop, Lightroom, Adobe Stock, and the Creative Cloud, you can find more info here:
bit.ly/2zwQ0nW
I use this software to record my screen:
telestream.pxf.io/DMrW2
Unsure of how to price your photography? Check the 2019 Guide to Pricing Your Photography:
amzn.to/2S1CiU7
All links above are my affiliate links. Please read my code of ethics statement for more info about my affiliations:
onlinephotographytraining.com/code-of-ethics/
THANK YOU for watching!
I am a professional photographer who has been using Lightroom since Version 2. I've lost count of how many books and videos I've consulted over that time and this is the very best explanation of setting white and black point I've ever seen. With no hesitation whatever I would call this the definitive video on the subject! The secret to Anthony's teaching method is that he never assumes the fatal "oh they already know that" assumption that virtually cripples so many other approaches to teaching Lightroom and other skills. As always a job more than well done! Five stars out of Five!
Best tutorial on this subject
THIS WAS SO GOOD!
Thank you for this video
Thank you Anthony. Time is never wasted when I’m watching your tutorials. I’m learning on every viewing. Neville J.
Thanks for another great video. Knew about 1,2,3 but 4 was interesting and J key was new.
Solid video, just as I have come to expect from you.
Great, cristal clear! Thanx.
ALT-clicking any zone of the histogram is also the same as tip #1 :)
maybe you could mention a fifth way by using the tone curve ?
Thank You!
Is it possible for Lightroom to perform an auto black or white point over multiple images?
Curves 💭
Tip #2: The method for many images does not work automatically for each image, as it is the same value setting that comes in the other selected images. So no efficiency unless the images are 100% equally exposed.
MAybe a dumb question: Why do we set the white and black points in the first place ?
To increase the tonal range of an image, ie extract as much info as what your sensor captured - without clipping
I believe also to add contrast.
So apparently, the least common method is the only one I have ever used.