BTW, you did a great job.
Probably because the photos are well executed, so they work with desaturation.
Unless you did more then just desaturate them, then maybe it is a good idea for a guide you can write, so we all can enjoy.
BTW, you did a great job.
Probably because the photos are well executed, so they work with desaturation.
Unless you did more then just desaturate them, then maybe it is a good idea for a guide you can write, so we all can enjoy.
Thank you :)
I did desaturation through translation to "shades of white", they can still be returned to RGB.
After I discolored them, I corrected the shadows and light a little. A small correction.
I didn't quite understand about the idea for the guide. What exactly do you mean?
Meaning, if you take a colored photo and just use saturation and lower it down, it becomes black and white.
But that not always produce the best results.
If you touched it or corrected it, you can explain how.
Just an idea for a guide.
No, I'm not just reducing saturation. Although this is one of the possible ways. I use the Lightroom program and there is a tool/button "shades of gray". The mathematical algorithm of this transformation is unknown to me. But in this version, I still have the opportunity to work with color channels and more subtly adjust the shades of gray that correspond to the color channels.
At the same time, if you want to return to the color option, then simply switch the processing mode to color.
Looks interesting.
Because of bad lighting in my apartment, I have to reduce saturation (to remove yellowish light) and increase contrast (both due to lighting and old phone camera).
You can try to change the white balance settings of the camera itself, reduce the color temperature.