Digikam/Justering af niveauer

From KDE UserBase Wiki
Revision as of 10:43, 16 February 2011 by Claus chr (talk | contribs) (Importing a new version from external source)

Brug af digiKams værktøj Justering af niveauer

Fra Dmitri Popovs blog, 20 januar 2011

Når det drejer sig om justering af fotos, så er niveauer det vigtigste våben i digiKams arsenal. Dette værktøj lader dig justere lysstyrke og kontrast ved at angive områder med helt sort, helt hvid og mellemtoner i et histogram, som gør det til det perfekte værktøj til at rette under- og overeksponerede fotos, men også til at forbedre et fotos overordnede rækkevidde af farvetoner.

You can access the Levels tool in the image editor by choosing Color -> Levels Adjust. Select Luminosity from the Channel drop-down list, and press the Linear button.


Copyright Dmitri Popov

The key element in the Levels Adjust pane is the histogram with the black point and white point sliders. Simply put, the black point slider controls shadows, while the white point slider controls highlights. So to darken shadow areas in the photo, move the black point slider to the right. Need to boost highlights? Move the white point slider to the left.

Instead of using sliders, you can let digiKam adjust levels automatically by pressing the Auto button. Using this feature is often hit and miss, but you can easily revert all changes using the Defaults button.

Three color pickers next to the Auto button provide yet another way to tweak levels. To adjust shadows, press the the appropriate color picker button and click on an area in the photos that should be black. In a similar manner, you can adjust midtones and highlight using the appropriate color pickers.

Adjusting levels in the Luminosity channel can help to increase contrast without affecting color saturation. To change the color balance, you can adjust levels in the Red, Green, and Blue channels (select the appropriate channel in the Channel drop-down list). This can be useful for boosting colors and fixing photos which suffer from unnatural color casts.