(dramatic music) - Hi, and welcome. My name's Julieanne Kost and on today's episode of The Complete Picture, we're gonna take a look at how you can make some selective color adjustments using Lightroom. Now, I think we probably all know that you can make more global adjustments using things like the Temperature or the Tint sliders and certainly in the Basic panel we can come down under presence and change Vibrance and Saturation but that's gonna change all of the colors in the image at one time. So if we wanna have a little bit more control we need to take a look at the Hue, Saturation, and Luminance area of Lightroom. Now, let's just start with the Saturation. If I simply wanted to de-saturate this entire image I could use, for example, the V key if I wanted to go all the way to black and white. But I actually want to leave the image in color 'cause that's gonna enable me to do a few more things. So I'll just take down the saturation by clicking here on each one of the color sliders. So, obviously if I did this often what I'd wanna do is I'd wanna go ahead and create a preset for that and, in fact, there's a preset that you can download from my blog if you want to, that simply de-saturates everything. But it's really easy, you would just set all of the sliders up if you wanna create your own and then click on the plus icon and save out the saturation color adjustments right here. And save that as your preset. Alright, so that's one way to de-saturate an image but obviously because I can go into each one of these color ranges I have a lot more control. So say, for example, I might not want to have this top red area as de-saturated as it is right now. Well, if we grab the targeted adjustment tool by clicking on it and then click in that color that we want to manipulate, if we drag up it would increase the saturation and if we click and drag down, it decreases the saturation. So it might be a little confusing because when you click, Lightroom hides the cursor but I'm actually clicking and dragging up and you can see the sliders going to the right. If I click and drag down the sliders move to the left. And you'll also notice that it's not just the red slider that's moving because where I clicked in this image that color is made up of both red and orange so Lightroom goes ahead and moves both the red and orange slider in the correct relationship to how much color is underneath the point where I clicked. So we can go ahead and do that for this blue area, as well. Again, clicking and dragging up would add saturation, click and drag down to decrease the saturation. So it's kind of an easy way to balance things out. Then I could also go under the Hue, for example, if I wanted to change the color. Maybe I don't quite like that blue so, again, clicking and dragging up in that area will shift the blues and in this case a little bit of the aqua more towards the purple colors. Clicking and dragging down would bring them back towards the aqua. So, again, all I'm trying to do is just get two colors that match a little bit better here. Alright, now you might also wanna take this one step further and go and select your adjustment brush. Because I do have a lot of blue that's reflecting up here in this giant container. And so what I'll do is I'll grab my adjustment brush and just bring down the saturation here. And we can go ahead and bring it down to -100 and now you can see when I paint in here I can selectively change the color here because I'm just painting out 100%. If you tap the A key, that would give you the auto-mask right down here, that toggles it on. So we don't have to be quite as careful where I paint because Lightroom's gonna see the line between this container here and the little building and it won't jump over to de-saturate that orange color. Alright, let's move to the next image for one moment 'cause I also wanna show maybe a little bit of a different use of this. Now I will start here with the Basic panel because I do want to change the overall color balance. So, again, that's a global change so in that case, I would go ahead and use my Temperature or my Tint slider. I just want that background a little bit more blue. Now, what if we wanted to match the bicycle with the door? Well, then I need to scoot down again to HSL. And, by the way, HSL and Color, these two options... The functionality is almost identical. Let me just show you the difference. The main difference is that HSL, the Hue, Saturation, and Luminosity area that has the targeted adjustment tool which I use all the time instead of trying to guess what color this is, you know, is it more orange or does it have more yellow or red in it? I'll use the targeted adjustment tool to make my adjustments. If we scoot over to the Color area, we don't have that targeted adjustment tool. And the reason that we have them both though is they're just a different way of accessing color. See, when I'm in HSL I've got Hue, Saturation, and Luminosity so I can click on any of these and then I get all of the different color ranges. When we scoot over to color, basically I can click on any color and then quickly access Hue, Saturation, and Luminosity. So it's just a different way of laying it out. If you click on HSL and then you actually click on All we can see HSL, Hue, Saturation, and Luminosity for each color range so that might be an option as well. When I'm on a smaller monitor though, I like to pick just Hue, Saturation or Luminosity. Okay, so if I want to make the bike and the door the same color, again, I'll pick up my targeted adjustment tool and I'll be sure that I've got my option here set to Hue and then you can click and drag on that orange and you'll notice that by clicking and dragging up, I'm shifting those reds and oranges more towards the yellow hues. Now that's a little bit too far so I'm gonna back off. I'm also going to de-saturate that a little. So I'll click and just drag down a little on my saturation. Then I'll go back to Hue and I'm gonna pick up on the yellow door and I'm gonna go ahead and start dragging that down to bring those values, the orange and yellow, closer to the orange value in the bike. So you can see, you can make a lot of color changes. And if you think about it, we could actually take this to black and white as well and use the Black & White options to change the color ranges, how that converts to black and white. But now I wanna keep this in color and I just wanna show you one other way because you might be thinking, "Well, maybe you didn't wanna bring those two colors "closer together, maybe you wanted to have "the bike change to a different color." You'll notice that when I click and drag to change the hue, we really can't get a green bicycle. If you wanted to do that, then we need to switch over to our adjustment brush. I'm gonna bring the saturation all the way down. So I'm actually removing the saturation. And then I'm going to click in this color swatch right here, and we can go ahead and pick a green color. So now when we paint, and I'll just get a little bit smaller of a paint brush here, you can see that what's happening is I've got auto-mask turned on so Lightroom is automatically creating a mask so that I don't go over into the blue area. And the adjustment brush is basically taking out all of the saturation wherever I paint and then overlaying the green color that I selected. And if I paint too far all I need to do is hold down the Option key and then we can go ahead and back that out 'cause I didn't mean to paint that in the tire there. And then, again, I can get a smaller brush just using the left bracket key and go in and refine this and make any other adjustments. Again, I went a little too far there so, again, hold down the option key and just paint that out. What the Option key or the Alt Key on Windows does is it basically just changes from your brush to the eraser tool. So that's a way that you would go in and actually hand color an image. Just remember, if you are going to hand color an image don't take it to grayscale, don't tap the V key and go to grayscale, use the Hue, Saturation, and Luminosity area down here and just remove all of the saturation. Otherwise you're not going to be able to paint in the image because you told Lightroom to take it to grayscale. So, using a combination of Hue, Saturation, and Luminosity as well as the adjustment brush should allow you to make all of the selective color changes that you need in Lightroom. My name's Julieanne Kost, thanks for watching. (dramatic music)