I love photography and as much as I try to get the image right in camera when I press the shutter release there are just some times when you need adjust some overexposed bits or possibly do some custom editing to create a miniature look or selective colouring. Whatever the reason might be there will be times when you need to edit your images. A full out copy of Photoshop is more than $500. Even Photoshop Elements clocks in at $100 or so which is not super expensive but still, if I have an extra $100 I’m putting it towards a new lens or maybe that new tripod that I need.
In my last blog for Photography.ca I wrote about Picasa. Picasa does a wonderful job of basic photo editing, however, it just doesn’t cut it for anything really detailed. When I need more detailed editing capabilities I use Gimp. Gimp is a wonderful piece of software available for free use for Windows and Mac users as well as the original Unix platform. A companion product called ufRAW, also free, allows Gimp to open and edit RAW image files and since I shoot almost exclusively in RAW format it was a necessary add-on.
Gimp will do a lot more than I am capable of doing and I have still used it to do some amazing things. Like Photoshop it allows you to edit images using multiple layers, has many different filters and scripts that can change the look of your images (or parts of it) and also provides many different tools to work on your images. In this blog post I’ll edit an image and provide some screen shots to give you an idea of the capabilities of this wonderful piece of software, however, to really learn how to use it visit the tutorials page on the Gimp site.
In order to give you the broadest tour possible I will take an original image where I’ve done a fair bit of work on the image and walk you through the editing steps that I took to get it the way I wanted. Some of you out there may be much better at photo editing and so you will undoubtedly see areas where I am doing something wrong. Please feel free to comment below so I can learn more about how to do this stuff properly.
Let’s start with this photograph of a butterfly. Here’s the JPEG version created by exporting from Picasa with default settings. All things considered it’s not a horrible shot of the butterfly but the composition is kind of blah and the butterfly’s camouflage makes it difficult to see. Let’s open it in Gimp to see what we can do with this boring image.
First up, since it’s a RAW and I have ufRAW installed it automatically opens in ufRAW for me. Here I can make adjustments to the RAW image before jumping into the Gimp editor proper. For this image I’m going to make a few adjustments here so I end up in Gimp with the basics already completed. This is the general process for me.
- From Picasa I right click and select Open in Gimp.
- It automatically opens in ufRAW because it’s a RAW image.
- I’ve clipped a few highlights 0.1% and so I adjust the black levels a touch to eliminate those.
- I then adjust the curves to boost the overall exposure to where I like the image.
- Using the crop/rotate/size adjust tab I select a pleasing crop which puts the butterfly on an intersection of thirds and gives him space to “fly into”. Note the grid lines allow me to do this easily.
- Clicking OK transfers the image into Gimp for further editing where I adjust the colour levels and pump up the saturation on this one to give that butterfly a little more life.
- Next, I’m going to do some selective colouring to really make him stand out. So, I’ll duplicate the layer so I now have two butterflies.
- Change the top layer to B&W and create a layer mask that I paint through to expose the butterfly.
- I switched to the colour layer and added a touch of unsharp mask to sharpen up the image.
- Last, to finish it off, I add a couple of borders, first white, then black and save as a JPEG.
That’s it! Here’s the result:
Living in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Glenn Euloth enjoys travelling on the photographic journey. Visit www.euloth.com to join him on the trip or find him on our photography forum under the nickname of Iguanasan.
I also LOVE anything Open Source. Heck I had a copy of Adobe CS3 from work and I used my Open Sourced tools more. (I guess I was more comfortable with them but I also love the way these tools work with my work style)
My favorite programs for Graphics:
1: DigiKAM (KDE program Available in Linux-Windows-OS X) I can’t say enough for this program. It really is a great manager and editor of photography. There is also a great book called DigiKam Tricks that really helps get the most out of this program.
2: Krita (KDE Office Program) http://krita.org/ Works in Linux-Windows-OS X Best kept secret EVER. If I was talking general graphics program this would be number 1. The only difference is the DigiKam works so good with photography.
3: GIMP — I can’t wait for the single window gui coming in the next update (Pushed to later this year)
Freeware (Not open Sourced) I like Paint.net and Picasa
Hi Glenn:
Great article. But I needed to try it myself to get the finer details. I’ve posted my resulting similar image at:
https://picasaweb.google.com/jbarresi/PointPleasantParkHalifax#5594023374996701810
Though they are pretty explicit, I had a few problems following the instructions.
First: I couldn’t get from Picasa to Gimp by the right click, at least for the image I used. I had to go directly to Gimp to obtain the image, which then put it into UFRaw.
Second: My initial settings for the image in UFRaw were not at 0 but .71. I had to hit the reset on the right to get it to 0. Probably this is needed due to previous settings on UFRaw.
Third: I had a bit of trouble figuring out what you did on getting 0 from the clipping. I was able to raise the left or black end of the line up a bit and it changed numbers for my image in a similar way.
Fourth: I did figure out that one could put dots into the line and change exposure to a curve like you did, though it didn’t help my image, no doubt because it had different exposure.
Six, I next had a problem with layering. I had to look up on the web to find out how to do the mask, by choosing “mask” and “add mask” in the Layer list, then “white or full opacity”. After this I was able to ‘paint’ through it, though I had trouble with choosing a brush size.
Seventh: I’m not sure whether the two versions merged in my final output. Is this automatic? It seemed that I may have only gotten the background original image, but I couldn’t really tell.
Eighth: Related to this, I couldn’t save it in JPG, but had to Export it instead, because it had a transparent layer.
Anyway, whether I did it right or wrong, this was a great tutorial, and I’ve learned a lot from it on how to use UFRaw and GIMP on images.
Thanks,
John