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| Channel
Mixer |
"Channel Mixer" is great a great new image adjustment tool
that allows the user to mix/blend the colour channel balance of an
image. In fact so powerful is this new tool that you can easily replicate
the effect of placing red or yellow filters over the lens when using
black and white film.
The
starting point will always be a full colour image in RGB mode.
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Original
Picture
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"Channel
Mixer" Adjustment
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| To
convert colour image to black and white using "Channel Mixer" |
- Open
picture file in Photoshop
- Create
a Channel Mixer - adjustment layer.
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Creating
a adjustment layer over the original picture
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By
selecting the "Monochrome" checkbox we are instructing
Photoshop to convert the full colour RGB image into a monochrome
preview, but the image still retains all the colour channel information.
Note that in the screenshot of the "Channel Mixer" dialog
that the "Output Channel" is Gray; we cannot change it.
However, even though the red channel is initially at 100% and the
green and yellow channels are at 0% we are free to mix them as we
see fit. The objective is to optimise the image whilst ensuring
that total percentage for the three channels adds up to 100% or
as near as is possible. Interestingly combinations adding up to
more or less than 100% will be either darker or lighter than the
original colour image. So don't be afraid to experiment!
- Check
on "Monochrome
- Drag
the RGB-sliders for adjustment
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Above
is the default setting of Channel Mixer
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| Once
satisfy with the adjustment covert the RGB image to Grayscale. Flatten
the layers before choosing 'mode' > "grayscale" |
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