Dreadlock Girl
4Aug/098

Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips: Photo Fixin’ (Editing)

yoko a natural beauty

1.) Don't Get Lazy and think you'll fix it later. try to take the best images you can in the moment, not leaving the dirty work to do on the computer. I have a theory that no matter how amazing digital cameras are, they are breeding a generation of lazy and tech heavy photographers. Don't trade good technique and hard work for technology.

2.) Free photo editing online. I have fallen deeply in love with Picnik, it is a photo editing program that I have used for many an image. I just use it online. I paid the extra enabeling me to edit and change all that I please, but before I paid for the Picnik Premimum the freebe served me well too.

Here is the image you may recognize as my header image for the Dreadlock Girl main blog, with some changes and fixin's done. With photo editing, you can do so much, you can make your own header, work with your own images by putting text in them, or the year on your kids shots.

This is the before image, then I used Picnik to create my header, it has hundreds of fonts and really cool editing qualities.

Below is a screenshot of the final Dreadlock Girl header image, I love playing with Picnik! Make sure you check it out, you surely don't want to be in the dark any longer. And you no longer have the excuse that you don't know where to find the software. Picnik is excellent and very much pop-up free. There are small adds up at the top if you have not purchased the Premium Picnik, but they are not annoying. Picnik on!

I used Picnik to completely edit this and add the text. I love Picnik!

I used Picnik to completely edit this and add the text. I love Picnik!

3.) Don't toss your shots too soon! switch them to B&W or sepia and that really can hide many mistakes, saving some photos from the rubbish bin, maybe even having them end up some of your favourites. An error with the light meeter, bad colouring and so many more unpredictable blunders may be blended and made invisible in B&W, as long as the image is good and sharp...try it!

4.) The more you edit, the more your image quality decreases. Yes, sadly this is true, unless you are working in RAW. I don't work with RAW because they take so much more space than any of the other formats, and because I don't like to edit that much it really doesn't matter.  So with every colour change and edit, just beware of your image quality.

5.) Try not to mess. This last one is all personal opinion, maybe because I am a little old school, maybe because I like to try and get it right the first time, but it is how I feel. When I take a shot, if the sky is white, it is white, if I am lucky it will be blue, but I don't input a blue sky into my picture to make it better. Maybe more than anything I don't like messing around with those kinds of details. I like taking pictures, editing is probably my least favourite. I only try to fix my mistakes, salvage some shots...and besides that: nothing.

Make sure you check in next Wednesday for Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips!!

I always love answering questions for readers. I’d love ideas on future Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips sessions if you have them. Leave me a comment, I love hearing from you!

Previous Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips:
The Basics
Capture Real People, In Real Life Shots
Work That Thing! How to Get the Best Shots
Tips for Group Shots: How to Shoot a Group Session Like You Know What You’re Doing!
Photo Editing, Fixin' Your Images

Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips: I am going to do several of these posts, I am not a professional photographer by a long shot, but I love taking pictures and seeing beautiful pictures so I want to share what I have learned with you.

Comments (8) Trackbacks (0)
  1. This is great – thanks for the tip; I can’t wait to try it!

  2. This is so cool. Thanks so much for the software link.

    You know I wanted to know one thing. Is there a way to fade the background through a software? Suppose I take my picture and I don’t want anything else behind me to be in sharp focus, can that be done? Can it be don’t thru’ picnik?

  3. I really like your tips about editing. I will have to remember trying my bad photos in black and white or sepia, I’ve never done that before.

    • If it is sharp as an image, it really does work! Let me know how it goes! After you switch it to B&W if it is too light you will be able to adjust the darkness or lightness without making the colours look all wacky like it would if you were editing in regular colour.

      Let me know if you have questions!

  4. I have Photoshop Elements and it’s so much harder to use than Picnik, which I just spent the last hour playing with. Thanks for sharing it.

    My challenge is lighting and indoor shots. I take a lot of pics indoors and often there just isn’t enough light so I end up using a longer exposure but then am forced to use a tripod. Any tips for that?

    • I should do a post on messing with your settings. Have you tried increasing the ISO to 1600 it makes most shots work indoors (under regular light situations) pretty well. You can also adjust your white balance so that even the usual yellow glow from the light bulbs will be fixed.

      Let me know if that helps.

      What kind of camera do you have, are you able to adjust those settings?

  5. I never mess with my photos either except cropping, B&W, and sepia.


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