![]() ![]() Same as above, click to the right of Tone where it says Midtones and choose Highlights. Add another Color Balance layer, choose Layer>New Adjustments>Color Balance and name this one Highlights. First, turn off the layer visibility on the Shadows layer. Now if you want the color to affect only the highlights. Fotor’s color splash effect can help you convert your images into black and white while maintaining the colored areas you want to highlight easily. Move the red slider over to 55%, then move the yellow slider to the left -40% to give the image that classic reddish brown look. ![]() In the properties panel, click to the right where it says Tone, it defaults to Midtones but you have the option of two others, choose Shadows, as you only want the color to effect the shadows. Similar to the Channel Mixer, choose Layer>New Adjustments>Color Balance Using the same image that you have just converted to black and white using the Channel Mixer – add another new adjustment layer, Color Balance. Let’s start with a sepia tone, which is a reddish-brown color that gives those old vintage photos that classical look. Next, let’s add some color to a black and white image, or rather a tint. Try and keep the percentage totals equal to 100%. The ability to adjust each of the Red, Green and Blue sliders gives you more control over how you want your grayscale image to look. All the color information has now been lost. A dialog box appears, asking you if you want to, “Discard color information?”. Click Discard, but I would not recommend this method. Choose from the Image Menu>Mode>Grayscale. Open the image that you want to convert to black and white. Converting to Black and White in PhotoshopĬonverting a color to black and white in Photoshop is a relatively easy task. The viewer focuses in on the texture and contrast of the image.Ī heavy fog or mist over a landscape is much spookier in monochrome than in color. That’s why those old black and white movies are so good. So why would you bother with black and white imagery when we live in a world full of color? There are many reasons why, but a simple answer is that a black and white image can be quite powerful.Ī close up of a man’s or woman’s face, heavily lined from age, photographed in black and white may elicit a stronger emotion than the same image in color. ![]() Landscape scene in south of France using split-tone effect in ACR ![]()
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