Manic Academy 7: Post-production Atmosphere

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CRPhotomanipulation's avatar
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Article by Aegis-Illustration

Post-production is one of the key points on producing an image. You can spend hours finding the right model, atrezzo, composition, mixing everything up... But if you forget about giving the right atmosphere to your artworks, you're missing one of the key points: to give an atmosphere to what you are creating.

Creating atmospheres is something very personal and each one of us have a way to achieve that, but there are some basic techniques I'd like to share with you all. I encourage you to take them as a starting point and then discover your own depending on your personal style. Here we go!


This is the base image with no post-production.

Basic Post- Production Refinements



1) Lighting range
Lighting is the key point in photo manipulation. You must avoid absolute blacks and whites and find the middle value (unless it's your intention to do so for an expressive purpose) and get a more balanced and eye-friendly image. You can use several tools to achieve this depending on how your image looks like before final post-production.

- Shadows/Highlights, under the Adjustments menu in Photoshop, is my all-time favorite tool. It allows you to mute absolute blacks and white and bring them to the middle lighting range area.

- Negative blurring: Stamp all visible layers (Ctrl/Cmd + Alt + Shift + E), Invert (Ctrl + I), Desaturate (Ctrl/Cmd + U)and apply a Gaussian Blur of your choice, then switch to Overlay Blending Mode and adjust the Opacity to your liking. The effect is similar to Shadows/Highlights.

- Black & White: Use this Adjustment Layer to emphasize some areas of your lighting range. Not recommended if your image has already burnt areas.


The image with fixed lighting.

2) General tone and color
- Selective Color: This Adjustment Layer is a must to achieve a correct tonal range and to show the colors you really want. You can fine tune any tonal range from here. A personal tip, try to increase the Blacks of your two main colors. Sometimes it may add some depth depending of your basic color range.


Color enhanced, but not finished.

Advanced tips



1) Blurs
- Use Stamped Visible Layers with Gaussian Blurs switched to Screen and/or Soft Light (I recommend using both) to enhance the overall atmosphere of the images.


2) Small details
Before publishing your image, ask yourself some questions about the context, surrounding and ecosystems contained in your image. Maybe you might have forgotten some tiny elements that can bring some realism, like air particles, depth of field, and so on.


Almost there! Added depth of field and small details.


3) Advanced tone adjustments
- Gradient Maps: Use these Adjustment layers to switch the overall tonal range of the image. I recommend to use harmonic and complementary colors (i.e.: yellow + purple) and switching to Overlay or Soft Light.

4) The Difference trick: Fill a blank layer with a color of your choice and switch to Difference Blending Mode and set Opacity to less than 10%, then open Hue/Saturation (Ctrl/Cmd + U) and play with the Hue bar until you reach a medium tonal range that you like. This little tip is very useful in regards on what was commented on the first point about Lighting, but we use colors instead of light to achieve that.


The final image!

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RoxRio's avatar
Great tips. :clap: