Adobe Camera Raw

Stage lighting: Revealing hidden details with white balance

…or, This is Totally Why I Shoot Raw

Concerts and other stage performances are often lit by colored gels or LEDs that change quickly. Even auto white balance won’t know what to do as the lighting pattern changes and goes to extremes, such as deep blue or red. Faces can appear as as one solid color with no detail, as in the first picture below.

Fortunately, raw format brings us a nice surprise here. I shot the following raw image during the American tour of the French retro-synthpop band Yelle, and at first glance it looks like the faces are nothing but blue blobs. Happily, it turns out that shifting the white balance value in a raw processor (I used Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3) reveals dramatically more detail; it’s like a completely different picture.

Raw, white balance As Shot

Raw format, white balance As Shot: Faces are blank

Raw, white balance adjusted

Raw format, white balance adjusted…and details are magically revealed

What I think is going on is that they were in the blue light’s shadow but the warmer red light was at a better angle for their faces. Warming up the white balance de-emphasized blue and dug more red out of the raw file, so that the red light became the primary light source. If I’m right, it means this trick works only if at least one of the differently colored light sources is at an angle that’s favorable to the subject.

This technique doesn’t work at all with the JPEG version of the image shown below, because the RGB color values are already baked into the file. You can no longer get more red, you can only lose blue, so shifting the white balance of the JPEG image doesn’t reveal any useful new details.

JPEG exported from raw with As Shot white balance, and then adjusted

JPEG version also starting from As Shot white balance: Adjusting WB doesn't help

In a situation where white balance holds steady or changes slowly, you might be able to achieve the same quality in JPEG format by doing a custom white balance in camera. However, in an environment like a concert or even a wedding where the light and the action change so quickly, there’s simply no time to rebalance, so shooting raw is the only way to get the most out of your images later.

You might notice that for the JPEG format image, the WB scale is centered at zero and adjusted positive and negative to that. It’s a relative adjustment instead of the absolute color temperature value that’s available in raw, because for a JPEG image, the original white balance is now baked permanently into the image, providing less flexibility when editing. That’s a big reason I shoot in raw format. I even prefer pocket cameras that record in raw format (like the Panasonic DMC-LX3 I used to take this photo), so that I can rescue images like this one when needed.

What if you’re shooting with a camera that records only in JPEG format, or with a video camera? You’re stuck with what the camera gives you. The best white balance setting will depend on the white balance of the stage lights before colored gels are put on them. Older incandescent lights may be closer to tungsten white balance, while some LED lights may be balanced closer to daylight. You’ll have to try some test shots using the daylight or tungsten white balance presets, and see which setting produces more appealing images. Or, if you’re able to light up a white surface with pure white stage lights, you can try setting a custom white balance off of that.

Updates: Adobe Camera Raw 6.4.1, Lightroom 3.4.1

Adobe photography application icons

Adobe has released updates for its raw processing software:

Adobe Camera Raw 6.4.1 (click for release notes in PDF)
Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.4.1 (click for release notes in PDF, though at this writing I could only find 3.4 release notes)

The updates are mostly about support for new cameras, such as the Fuji FinePix X100. The Lightroom update also fixes a few bugs including a JPEG export bug that while quite rare, is very serious if you happen to come across it.

As usual, you can read the release notes and download the installers from

http://www.adobe.com/downloads/updates/

or:

To update Camera Raw directly, start Photoshop and choose Help > Updates.

To update Lightroom directly, start Lightroom and choose Help > Updates.

Updates: Adobe Creative Suite CS5.5, Photoshop CS5 12.0.4/12.1

Adobe Creative Suite 5.5 box shots

It’s been a busy week over at Adobe, with the release of Adobe Creative Suite 5.5 and a free update to Adobe Photoshop CS5 12.0.4. There are lots of places on the web where you can read about specific new features, so here I’ve got a more customer-oriented take on these updates.

Adobe Creative Suite 5.5

Adobe Creative Suite 5.5 is a paid upgrade, and yet it isn’t CS6, so you’ll naturally ask whether you need it. You’ll probably be happiest with the CS5.5 feature set if you want to more easily integrate the latest technologies and formats into your workflow, such as HD video from the newest digital cinema and DSLR cameras; or if you’ve wanted more efficient ways to create, preview, and publish ebooks and other content for tablets and smartphones using Adobe InDesign, Adobe Flash, or Dreamweaver. It’s primarily because of these fast-moving new technologies and delivery media that Adobe felt a .5 release was warranted. If your day-to-day work is not so cutting-edge, you may have less of an need to upgrade.

If you edit video, the upgrade may be well worth it. Adobe CS5.5 Production Premium gets quite a boost, with enhancements like expanded GPU support and dual-system sound in Adobe Premiere Pro, fast 64-bit Adobe Media Encoder with an efficient new UI and customizable presets, a first-ever Mac version of Adobe Audition pro audio software, and the advanced Warp Stabilizer in After Effects for steadying shaky handheld footage. (If it sounds like I’m more familiar with Production Premium here, it’s because I was involved in producing some of the launch content about its new features.)

If you haven’t upgraded to CS5 yet, you do get a pretty long list of new features when you put CS5 and CS.5 together. You can see handy lists of CS5.5 new features versus CS5, CS4, and CS3 on the Adobe Creative Suite web page (pick a suite, then click Features).

Adobe also announced a move to 24-month major upgrade cycles with a minor .5 upgrade halfway between those. While cynics will say that more frequent upgrades is a way for Adobe to charge customers more often, the increased frequency can be a good thing overall. Shorter cycles actually make it easier to skip upgrades since you know the next one’s just another 12 months down the road, yet if you find yourself in a situation where new client requirements or business needs require new capabilities, you’ll likely get them sooner than with a longer upgrade cycle. It’s like when a train starts running more often: You’re not going to ride them all, but when you do need one, you won’t have to wait as long.

Adobe Photoshop CS5 12.0.4 (and 12.1)

The free Photoshop CS5 12.0.4 update lets Photoshop CS5 communicate directly with other applications, such as the Adobe Nav, Easel, and ColorLava iPad apps that let you use the multitouch interface of your iPad as an extension of Photoshop. Or to enable cool new training tools like having an iPad magazine give you a how-to demo by directly controlling Photoshop on your computer. And of course, the update also includes a list of bug fixes.

The version of Photoshop that ships with Creative Suite 5.5 is numbered 12.1, which is the same as 12.0.4 except that it also works with the new subscription licensing that Adobe announced along with Creative Suite CS5.5. (Note that there is no Photoshop CS5.5.)

To get the update, start Photoshop CS5 and choose Help > Updates. If you prefer to download the standalone installer or want to read the release notes, go to:

http://www.adobe.com/downloads/updates/

Because Adobe tends to provide Camera Raw plug-in updates only for the current major version of Photoshop, some users have expressed concerns about whether a paid upgrade is needed to continue getting free Camera Raw updates. Because the current major version of Photoshop remains Photoshop CS5, your free Camera Raw updates will continue, presumably until CS6.

Updates: Adobe Camera Raw 6.4, Lightroom 3.4

Adobe photography application icons

Adobe has released Camera Raw 6.4 and Lightroom 3.4. You can read about the new supported raw formats, new lens profiles, new cameras supported for tethered shooting, and the list of bug fixes in a blog post by Lightroom product manager Tom Hogarty:

Lightroom Journal: Lightroom 3.4 and Camera Raw 6.4 are now available

As usual, you can read the release notes and download the installers from

http://www.adobe.com/downloads/updates/

or:

To update Photoshop and Camera Raw directly, start Photoshop and choose Help > Updates.

To update Lightroom directly, start Lightroom and choose Help > Updates.

Updating the Process Version in Camera Raw 6 and Lightroom 3: Peachpit.com article

Process version before and after conversion

Before (left) and after (right) updating the process version

Have you wondered about the mysterious little exclamation point icon that shows up when you edit older raw images in Adobe Camera Raw 6 or Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3? You can use it to migrate your existing raw format images to the new processing technology in Camera Raw 6 and Lightroom 3. In my latest Peachpit.com article, I explain the process version of a raw photo and how updating it will give you more detail and less noise, even with your oldest raw photos!

Click the link below to read the article at Peachpit.com:
Updating the Process Version in Camera Raw 6 and Lightroom 3

This article is an expanded version of a topic in my book, Real World Adobe Photoshop CS5 for Photographers (Adobe Press).