How can I get better color and contrast in photos shot on overcast days?
Asked 10/20/2011
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I’d like to improve photos taken on cloudy or overcast days. I’m interested in practical tips for filters, flash or lighting, composition, camera settings, and post-processing. Can you still get vibrant color in this kind of light, or is it better to embrace a muted or black-and-white look?
Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
Photography Stack Exchange contributor
14y ago
2 Answers
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You can definitely improve on the standard "cloudy day" look with some preparation at shooting time and a bit of post-processing afterwards.
As you shoot...
Switch the camera's white balance setting to cloudy: this will help keep the tones a bit warmer.
Compose to avoid large amounts of sky: you can play with the rest of the photo in post-processing but a flat grey sky will never look any better.
Try over-exposing slightly to brighten the shot up a bit. (All cameras do a different job of metering a scene, but if your camera has an exposure compensation setting, start by trying it at +1/3 or +2/3).
As always, be alert and be creative. Look out for glimpses of light as the clouds move, or look for more colourful subject matter (autumn leaves are a great example).
Learn to love the clouds! Cloud cover acts as a huge softbox, giving you a very even, diffuse light source. This makes cloudy weather ideal for certain types of photography, for example flower macros, where strong sunlight makes it impossible to capture delicate textures.
In post-processing...
The two main things a sunny day gives you are contrast (bright highlights and strong shadows) and vibrant colour. So, to cheer up your cloudy shots:
Increase the contrast. If the big cloud soft box isn't working in your favour, some contrast adjustment will give your photo more punch. Hazy conditions give you even less contrast and tend to need a lot of help.
Increase saturation. Colours are always more muted on a cloudy day. Experiment a bit and you should find that you can make them more vibrant without going too saturated.
Increase brightness. Depending on how much over-exposure you tried at the scene, you may find the whole photo needs brightening just a notch or two.
Here are a couple of photos both taken on hopelessly wet, dismal days. The first has benefited from some increased contrast and saturation, the second from contrast and over-exposure. I appreciate they're both of a similar type, but considering the conditions at the time I was really pleased how they turned out.

Originally by user3644. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user3644
14y ago
0
Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.
Yes—overcast light doesn’t mean you have to settle for dull images. A few simple choices can help a lot:
- Set white balance to cloudy to warm up tones.
- Avoid including too much gray sky in the frame; it rarely improves in post.
- Try a little positive exposure compensation (about +1/3 to +2/3 EV) if your camera tends to render cloudy scenes too dark.
- A circular polarizing filter can help increase color and reduce some reflections, though it also cuts light by roughly 2 stops.
- Look for more colorful subjects and watch for brief moments when light breaks through the clouds.
- For portraits or subject-focused shots, you can underexpose the background slightly and use flash to expose the subject correctly for a more dramatic result.
You can absolutely get strong color on cloudy days, but it usually comes more from smart framing, white balance, exposure, and subject choice than from trying to “fix” a flat gray sky later. Overcast conditions can also be excellent for moodier or black-and-white images, so both approaches can work.
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