Spot Colour - How do you do it?
Discussion
Only just figured this out myself.
1. Open the image
2. Open the Layers toolbox
3. Richt-click the layer called "Background" and select "Duplicate Layer"
4. Click Image menu then Adjustments then Desaturate
The new layer will now go B&W. The colour layer is still beneath it.
5. Select the Eraser tool from the main toolbox.
6. Select an eraser size, ideally one of the feathered-edge ones, from the drop down just below the File.. Edit.. etc. menus
7. Erase the area where you want to get colour. You are basically rubbing out the black and white layer, revealing the colour underneath.
1. Open the image
2. Open the Layers toolbox
3. Richt-click the layer called "Background" and select "Duplicate Layer"
4. Click Image menu then Adjustments then Desaturate
The new layer will now go B&W. The colour layer is still beneath it.
5. Select the Eraser tool from the main toolbox.
6. Select an eraser size, ideally one of the feathered-edge ones, from the drop down just below the File.. Edit.. etc. menus
7. Erase the area where you want to get colour. You are basically rubbing out the black and white layer, revealing the colour underneath.
miniman said:
Only just figured this out myself.
1. Open the image
2. Open the Layers toolbox
3. Richt-click the layer called "Background" and select "Duplicate Layer"
4. Click Image menu then Adjustments then Desaturate
The new layer will now go B&W. The colour layer is still beneath it.
5. Select the Eraser tool from the main toolbox.
6. Select an eraser size, ideally one of the feathered-edge ones, from the drop down just below the File.. Edit.. etc. menus
7. Erase the area where you want to get colour. You are basically rubbing out the black and white layer, revealing the colour underneath.
Great! Works a treat mate!
Or, even simpler
In PS, select a suitable size brush.
Set the colour to pure white
Now, next to where you set the brush size, there is a drop down menu. It normally says "normal". Click on the drop down menu, select "saturation", and now paint.
PS will now de-saturate anything you paint on.
Simple, single step, two mouse clicks, and just as good as the others.
Just goes to prove there is always 20+ ways of doing something in PS, but normally there is something that will do it in just one or two mouseclicks
J
In PS, select a suitable size brush.
Set the colour to pure white
Now, next to where you set the brush size, there is a drop down menu. It normally says "normal". Click on the drop down menu, select "saturation", and now paint.
PS will now de-saturate anything you paint on.
Simple, single step, two mouse clicks, and just as good as the others.
Just goes to prove there is always 20+ ways of doing something in PS, but normally there is something that will do it in just one or two mouseclicks
J
Just a thought I had reading through this (as I've had an idea for a cliched image for the competition this month, but might be worth a try
)...
All the methods usually suggested involve the use of just "desaturate" to get the black and white. I'm would guess that to use one of the myriad other methods of converting an image to black and white, and then spot colour, would be through the use of setting a history point before using your chosen method to convert to b&w and then use the history brush to bring back the colour, right?
)... All the methods usually suggested involve the use of just "desaturate" to get the black and white. I'm would guess that to use one of the myriad other methods of converting an image to black and white, and then spot colour, would be through the use of setting a history point before using your chosen method to convert to b&w and then use the history brush to bring back the colour, right?
ronj said:
Miniman,
your instructions were very easy to follow so here is my first attempt.
![]()
Took the picture at Bruntingsthorpe, any comments are welcome.
Ron.
Looks good. One thing that you've done which I totally forgot about a number of times, is to remember that any objects visible through the windows (e.g. the grass on the other side) should stay B&W. I have a number of pictures with green grass showing through the windows when everything else is B&W

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