How can I make greens look more vivid in nature photos?
Asked 2/26/2012
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I’m an amateur photographer and I notice that many professional nature images have very bright, rich green foliage. Is that mostly done in post-processing, or are there things to do at capture time as well? What Photoshop or Lightroom adjustments are typically used to make greens look more vivid without overdoing it?
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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The question that you are asking is a very common one, but the answers are not as straight forward as you may think. How does a professional make the colors so bright, the contrast so well defined, the focus so perfect, etc ? Well, it isn't just one thing, ever. It isn't a single setting on the camera, or a single post processing technique or button. It is a combination of talent, skill, technique, equipment, patience, etc - all things that cannot be adequately described in a short answer such as this.
The article "Magic Camera Settings" by Thom Hogan really gives a great example of this. Many times amateur photographers are looking for one magic bullet, such as a setting or preset - but you will find none that gives such a general "pop" to photos, as it is a combination of many things.
I won't leave you without helping you out a bit though :) I would suggest picking up a circular polarizing filter. It will help a great deal in giving your greens a very rich vibrant green color. It also helps blues to pop, and can assist when reflections exist in the frame as well. As for post processing, you can use sliders in Lightroom for vibrance, saturation, and clarity to get the photos to pop. You also can single out the green channel and boost the saturation of just that. Don't go too overboard though or you will end up with a very fake looking photo.
Originally by user4892. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user4892
14y ago
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There usually isn’t one “magic” setting. Vivid greens are typically the result of both good capture technique and careful post-processing.
At capture time, proper exposure matters a lot. Also, leaves and grass often look dull because their waxy surfaces reflect the sky; a polarizing filter can reduce that glare and make greens appear richer. Some photographers also use mild warming filters, or a warming polarizer.
In post, a subtle boost to vibrance is usually safer than simply increasing saturation, because vibrance tends to enrich color more naturally. The look in your examples may also come from broader editing choices like contrast and tone adjustments. One of the images you linked appears to use HDR-style processing, which is a different workflow involving multiple merged exposures.
So the short answer is: partly post-processing, but not only post-processing. Better light, proper exposure, reduced reflections, and restrained color edits all work together.
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