Book Image

Mastering Apple Aperture

By : Thomas Fitzgerald
Book Image

Mastering Apple Aperture

By: Thomas Fitzgerald

Overview of this book

Apple Aperture is one of the leading photo editing software packages available in today's market. It provides you with all the tools to organize, browse, and perfect your images, so you can make every shot your best shot.Mastering Apple Aperture aims to teach you the skills and knowledge necessary to become a master of the Apple Aperture software. It will build upon your existing core skills and show you new and advanced ways to get things done in Apple's powerful photography software.Mastering Apple Aperture starts by showing you the most simple and efficient ways to import and organize your images. It then takes you through the techniques for processing photos before moving on to cover advanced topics like working with tethered shooting, multiple libraries, curves, and metadata.You will discover how to edit images in Aperture and will gain complete mastery over processing images. You will also explore ways of extending Aperture through the use of plugins and third-party software. This book concludes with tips and tricks for the best ways to output images from Aperture, whether for print or for screen.  
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Mastering Apple Aperture
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Multiple Curves adjustments


Another big advantage of Aperture's Curves tool is that you can have multiple Curves adjustments. If you use this strategically you can save yourself lots of work in the long run. To add a second (and third, fourth, fifth and so on) Curves adjustment, from the cog pop-up menu at the top right of the Curves adjustment panel, choose Add New Curves Adjustment.

An example of why you might want to do this is as follows. If you want to add contrast to your image, but you also want to use curves to adjust the colors, rather than doing it in one adjustment, you can do your brightness adjustment in one curve and do the color adjustment in the other. This separates the two processes mentally and will allow you to visualize the adjustments a bit easier. This, in turn, will make it easier to make adjustments.

Another reason is if you need to apply one set of adjustments to one part of an image and one set of adjustments to another. As Curves can be brushed in, you can use multiple...