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Mark L
14-06-2012, 8:27pm
I'll post this here so others may learn along with me (hopefully).
So in a recent thread it was suggested that "If you could "warm up" the tones....." and ".....so moving the temp to give warmth will add heaps to the image." http://www.ausphotography.net.au/forum/showthread.php?106099-The-Drip&p=1032645#post1032645

What does this mean and/or how is it achieved?

ricktas
14-06-2012, 8:35pm
warmth.

Blue colours are cool
Orange colours are warm

Think of this. When you get a cold winter day, with snow, it has a 'coolness' to it. This exerts itself on the human psyche. Think about watching a movie set in the Arctic, we as humans tend to feel cold, even though we might be in a nice warm room. Sometimes we will even shiver.

Warm, think of a nice summer evening with a glowing sunset. It makes us feel warm.

This is what is meant by warmth in photography. If you shoot RAW, you can adjust the white balance to create a warmer photo by slider the WB slider. You can also warm up a photo by increasing the saturation of the red/orange/yellows in the photo.

ricktas
14-06-2012, 8:41pm
Example:

a 'cool' photo
90069

the same photo 'warmed'
90070

Notice how the tint in the second photo makes it feel like the environment that morning would have been warmer. The temperature a few degrees higher than the 'cool' photo

In portraiture, warming up a photo can tend to make the subject appear more vibrant, lively, healthy even

William W
18-06-2012, 11:15am
In portraiture, warming up a photo can tend to make the subject appear more vibrant, lively, healthy even

Example:

http://gallery.photo.net/photo/15937740-lg.jpg

WW