Digital Camera World

Photo Answers

Andrew is a highly experienced writer and photographer – if you have a problem, he is here to help.

Photo Answers Landscape Special!

Split success

Q I saw some amazing landscape images recently, and the photographer told me they were split-toned. What does that mean?

Mary Lane

A Split-toning is a technique that’s really easy to do in the postprocessing of a raw file, because both Lightroom and Camera Raw have a Split Tone panel you can play with. Essentially split-toning is a type of colour grading that gives a different look to your photograph; it can be used with both colour and black-and-white images. It’s called split-toning simply because you can colour-tone the highlights separately to the shadows.

A visual explanation is probably the easiest approach; here are four different split-tone treatments. In the first image, the highlights are boosted by orange and the shadows by blue so that we have a crossprocess look. In this case, it doesn’t really suit the scene. In the second image, the reverse – orange shadows with blue highlights – has been used, and the result is better for this landscape. In the third

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