Photoshop Black and White The influence of black and white photography has lasted throughout time, finding itself a sought after method for its unique attractions. For the photographer this requires a different set of skills and techniques. Shapes, contrasts, and light must all work harder to tell the story within the image. But when this art is mastered, the effects are amazing.
While some digital cameras have a black and white mode available, if yours does not, black and white is still possible. Many photographers would agree that it is actually easier to make the shot in color, converting over to black and white in editing. The Photoshop program has a variety of techniques to make this conversion over to black and white or as the program refers to it as grayscale. The degree to which the subtleties can be altered is dramatic.
The most simplistic method of converting color to black and white is to simply change the mode to grayscale (Image > Mode > Grayscale). While this will work, there are other methods.Lets take a look at three other methods that will convert color to grayscale (black and white):
Method #1 - Desaturation
The first method is desaturation. This is the removal the visible color information while keeping the RGB status of the file. This would allow you to add a tint at a later point without having to change color mode again. Follow Steps: Image > Adjustments > Desaturate (or press Ctrl/Cmd + Shift + U).
One effect of desaturation is a potentially a flat, uninspiring version of the original picture. This can be improved on however by looking at the picture in parts. You can increase textures in one area by darkening the shadows and midtones, or increase contrast in another to remove haziness. To do this, take a feathered section to work with and press Ctrl/Cmd + J to copy and paste the selection to a new layer. Add a 'Levels Adjustment Layer' to it, combining the two layers as a clipping mask. Drag the Black and Gray point markers toward the right to bring out texture or to the left to decrease. If you see a dividing line ater making the Levels adjustment, remove by adding a layer mask to the newly made level (set to Reveal All) and paint on the mask in black until the edge disappears using a soft brush at a low opacity setting.
While a Levels adjustment layer would add contrast, a different method would be: Follow Steps: Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Curves This will add a Curves adjustment layer to the background layer. Apply the curve shown to increase midtone contrast, but at slight decrease to the highlights and shadows, however this lessens the haziness effect.
Method #2 - Single Channels
A photographer can change the effect of the shot with the use of color filters. The Single Channel method follows the same line of thought from the editing perspective.
Imagine a photo of the blue ocean. Going to the Layers palette, click the Channels tab and click on the Red channel. The image seen be the darkening of the blue-tinted areas the same result that a red filter over the lens would have created. For a comparison, click on the Green channel for a result similar to the Red channel but less drastic. Finally, the Blue channel, it will be lighter, since most of the image is blue. Without changing anything, you have three different ready-made black-and-white effects.
After choosing the filter effect you desire, use this keyboard shortcut sequence to make it into a new document: Ctrl/Cmd + A (selects all) Ctrl/Cmd + C (copies the selection to the clipboard) Ctrl/Cmd + N (creates a new document of the same proportions as whatever we have on the clipboard. The document will also be a grayscale as we only have one channel selected) Enter/Return (to confirm the settings. No changes are necessary) Ctrl/Cmd + V (to paste the contents of the clipboard to a new layer) You can then use Levels and Curves to fine-tune the result.
Method #3 - Calculation
Use this method to custom set the levels in each color channel is the preset configuration effects are not what you are looking for in the change of tones or strength of color effects.
Choose the channel you desire and keep it active and go to Image > Calculations. If the Red channel was active, the Red channel will appear in the Calculations dialog box. Source 1 and 2 are set to the same document, layer, and Red channel, which means they will all be combined for the calculation to take place. Set the blending drop-down to Multiply, working in the same way as the normal layer blend methods. Multiply will darken the image, but based on the red channel. As a result blue elements or elements with a blue cast will become darker than other elements. Set the Result drop-down box to New Document to create a new multichannel file based on the calculated result.
Combine Red and Green Channels to acheive a slightly less pronounced result, using the Multiply blend mode. The difference is subtle, but it shows the fine control you have in this technique.
To do this make sure the RGB composite channel is active, and go to Image > Adjustments > Channel Mixer. Enable the Monochrome checkbox. If you change the percentage values for each of the Red, Green, and Blue channels, it will dramatically effect the image. Make sure to keep the total value below 100% between all channels, else the color will be adversely effected in the image