In parts one and two of the “What is Color Correction?” series we looked at the difference between color adjustment and color correction and discovered that color cast presents a major factor when “cleaning up” an underwater photo. But now you may be curious—what does color cast really mean, especially with respect to underwater photography? And how come I don’t see this “color cast” while I’m diving? It’s all about how the human eye sees compared with how a camera sees.
While underwater the eyes see similarly to a camera, but the eye’s brain further “corrects” the visual input, and the experience seems more in color than what a camera captures or what the reality might be. The brain can do this because the visual information is there, the brain removes much of the blue-green color cast and we “see” in what we perceive to be truer color. The same holds true with old faded photographs, photos taken in haze, mist or fog, and, fortunately, underwater photos. With digital photos and photoshop or while scanning processed slides and photos, it’s possible to bring balanced color out from these types of images much the same way our brain does, because the visual information is still there.
These bat ray photos show the kind of natural balanced color that can be coaxed from underwater photos with some simple industry standard color correction techniques. In my opinion, nearly all underwater photographers I see on the web just fiddle with different tools in Photoshop looking for results without knowing why or how these specific tools are meant to be used. The most popular offending Photoshop tools I see misused by underwater photographers are HSB controls and the Channel Mixer. These are powerful tools if one knows how, when and why to use them.
Unfortunately I’ve seen few, if any, divers on any of the scuba photo forums that do know how, when and why these tools are used. Let me suffice to say right now that these are not the tools that will work properly to negate a color cast, and they are never the “first move” tools for this type of color work. In part four of the “What is Color Correction?” series, we will explore why this is so, and what the proper tools are for a “first move” adjustment.
—continued in pt.4
(©2010 Daniel Mendoza, CatalinaUnderwaterPhoto.com. All Rights Reserved.)



to the home of my underwater scuba photo galleries. Check out my photos and movies and see how and why I use software like Photoshop, Final Cut and Aftereffects to color correct my images and video clips.

