Thanks for sharing, I was struggling to convert these images to BW, but with this tip was easier to give more precision. As always your tips are wonderful treatment
I really like how you explain everything. I was not scare to use it, and my work has been cut in half of the time. thank you Mr. Hughes. looking forward to more of you videos. Thank you
This was very useful, making it easier to make adjustments and play with things I would usually do using grayscale > Duotone mode. There's so many ways in photoshops to get the same results, all of them have their benefits and drawbacks.
OK, is it the 'Target Adjustment' tool as it's called in Photoshop or the 'On Image' tool that Richard Harrington has been calling it? Why not just call it what it's called and not the street lingo?
Una herramienta muy útil
sure it will be useful to interested ...
Thanks for the tips
Obrigado.
Thanks for sharing, I was struggling to convert these images to BW, but with this tip was easier to give more precision. As always your tips are wonderful treatment
VERY informative, thank you Bryan.
I really like how you explain everything. I was not scare to use it, and my work has been cut in half of the time. thank you
Mr. Hughes. looking forward to more of you videos. Thank you
Thank you for sharing! Quick and simple.
Great info. It helps if you start with beautiful images like the ones you used in the demo!
thank you Bryan keep it up :)
This was very useful, making it easier to make adjustments and play with things I would usually do using grayscale > Duotone mode. There's so many ways in photoshops to get the same results, all of them have their benefits and drawbacks.
thank you Bryan.
was this the last episode? :( best quick tutorials I have seen for photoshop yet.
activo con ustedes desde RD
Thank you, it help me alot :)
Helpful video, there are indeed MANY ways to convert a color photo to black and white, for many different results!
Can greyscale be accessible in camera raw in CC 2019? Or how to?
Cool
OK, is it the 'Target Adjustment' tool as it's called in Photoshop or the 'On Image' tool that Richard Harrington has been calling it? Why not just call it what it's called and not the street lingo?