Photo editing show-and-tell #1

On weekends I batch upload to this blog all the photos I’ve posted to Twitter over the course of that week (or, occasionally, several weeks!).

In the meantime, through the magic of technology and cloud computing working together in the background, those photos have been automatically copied from my smartphone to my computer. And, while I originally post those photos to Twitter from my phone, I usually post them to this blog from my computer.

It’s only when I’m looking at these photos on my large screen monitor that I get to fully appreciate the editing and post-processing I’ve done on them. (For which I use the Snapseed app, btw.) So I thought I’d do a bit of a show-and-tell on two of my recent photos to document what I did to them and why.

A bright, sunny day washes out colours

Here’s the original photo I took of a tree in autumn whose leaves had all turned shades of red. This was taken with my Google Pixel 3XL (released November 2018).

There’s a bunch of things I don’t like about this photo:

  • The colours are washed out. The sky is pale blue, when in real life it was a deeper blue, and the leaves of the tree had more vibrant shades of red than what you see here.

  • The brightness of the sun has oversaturated parts of the photo. Here you can’t make out any definition in the clouds, though when I saw them through my sunglasses they had much more depth. Also things like the pavement have almost no texture.

So what I did was reduce the highlights, added some colour saturation, and (mainly for the clouds) added a bit of the ‘HDR-scape’ filter. I also selectively increased the colour saturation on the tree. All that resulted in this image which has much more depth, colour vibrancy, and textural definition.

Here a side-by-side before and after that makes those edits much clearer. Yes, the ‘after’ photo looks darker overall, but that’s because I’ve turned down the highlights that made the ‘before’ photo too bright. Note the restored blue of the sky and the red of the tree leaves, the depth and definition of the clouds, and the texture you can see in things like the pavement.

A gloomy overcast day also washes out colour

Here’s another photo that, for opposite reasons, essentially had the same issues as the one above. This time it was the gloominess of the light that washed out the colours and led to the lack of contrast and texture.

The fix for this was basically the same: reduce highlights, add ambience (which tweaks the brightness and increases saturation), and add a touch of HDR-scape for the clouds.

Here’s the side-by-side that shows the differences more clearly. We now have more vibrant colours (look at the colourful building and the grass), more definition in the clouds, and more depth overall. And I think the darker ‘after’ photo does a better job of capturing the gloomy, overcast mood of the day.

I don’t have too many other examples to show you, to be honest. That’s mainly because, with decent lighting, the Pixel 3XL camera does a remarkably good job of creating a balanced, well exposed, nicely coloured photos. Those I just have to crop and they’re ready to go.

I will talk about what else I do to improve my photos before I share them, but that’s for another blog post.

What kind of post-processing do you do on your photos before you post them or share them anywhere? And what camera and editing software do you use? I’d love to know.