Photoshop for UW Photos

August 23, 2015

I was working on the computer this morning and an underwater photo from Kadavu, Fiji came up on our desktop slideshow. Here’s what it looked like originally…

Before
Before

The reason this particular photo interested me is that I’ve learned some new Photoshop techniques that work great on underwater photos – made possible by the new, and now affordable, Photoshop CC.  This photo seemed like a challenging candidate.

Here’s the after…

After
After

I’ll put up a complete tutorial in the near future, but as a hint:

1. Dehaze filter in camera raw filter, as well as the other tweaks possible there like clarity and vibrance. (Here’s a YouTube video.)

2. A levels mask layer. Here’s the trick there: Alt-Click on the auto button, then select the “Enhance Per Channel Contrast” box. You can also select the “Snap Neutral Midtones” box if it makes the image look better. (Here’s a great video tutorial from Lynda.com. If you haven’t seen Lynda.com before, they have amazing tutorials for just about everything from cake decorating to brain surgery!)

3. Then in the levels dialog, select and adjust individually the red, green, and blue midpoint slider to taste.

4. Add a Black & White adjustment layer, set the blending mode to Luminosity, and adjust the individual colors to taste. (Here’s a YouTube video.)

5. (I didn’t do this, but probably should have as my “after” image looks a little over-sharpened and over-processed.) I usually dial the adjustments back just a tiny bit. Before I start processing images, I make a layer copy of the original (ctrl-j). After processing, I adjust the transparency of the adjusted layer to dial the adjustments back.

Additionally, I cropped the image and used Photoshop’s amazing healing tool to add a little head-room above the coral in the new frame.

I don’t feel guilty using Photoshop to enhance images. One: this isn’t photojournalism, and two: the result looks more like it did in real life (after all, we’re only using a point-and-shoot UW camera – the Olympus Tough, with the flash turned off).

This isn’t as hard as it sounds. Besides, what else have you got to do out here? Scrimshaw?

By the way, I said Photoshop is now affordable. It used to be over $1000 for the full program. Now you can “lease” it for $120 per year, and that includes all the updates you can eat. It’s called Photoshop CC (creative cloud). Don’t let the cloud thing throw you. You don’t have to have online access to use it. You do need to let it phone home every 4 months (with the annual payment arrangement). -Rich

Dramatic Waya

August 16, 2015

We’ve been trapped in gray days, drizzle and wind but that couldn’t contain the majesty of the south end of Waya Island.

Each Beach Has It’s Own Magic

August 15, 2015

On this very gray day here at the north end of Naviti Island, Fiji, we got out to the beach and found it covered with these tiny, round, flat shells – each with a hole in the center.

tiny-round-shells-with-hole-1

tiny-round-shells-with-hole-3

When I saw the first one, I showed it to Cyndi and told her that if I could find about a million more I could make her a necklace. Little did I know that billions wouldn’t have been a problem. The glowing streaks on the beach in the picture below are millions of these shells.

tiny-round-shells-with-hole-2

I spent about an hour with my friend Google, but she couldn’t tell me what they are. I think they might be some kind of algae or plant skeleton. If you know, please tell us. -Rich

WADs

August 14, 2015 at Naviti Island, Fiji

WADs

I might have some Seasonal Affective Disorder. I notice a mood change when the sun hides for a few days.

I know I have WADs: Wind Affective Disorder syndrome. I get unhappy when the wind blows.

Why? I guess the easy answer is that I’m afraid of dragging anchor and hitting the reef. I know the odds are that our anchor will hold, but I still worry, just like I know my odds of winning the lottery are quite small, but I still buy the occasional ticket. (The anchor-drag lottery is not one I want to win.)

And when the wind stops after blowing for a few days, I get almost manic. A couple nights ago, it was still. We sat in the cockpit and I was so happy with life that I could almost cry. Last night, with the wind blowing 20 knots and the boat rocking, we huddled below in the cabin, drank, and tried to forget the wind by watching TV. (Problem: we can’t drink enough to really help in case we do drag and have to spring into action.)

To treat SADs, people use bright lights. Maybe I could treat WADs by plugging my ears with my earbuds and listening to music? -Rich