Apply Color Grading
Apply color grading using HSL adjustments, tone curves, and color wheels to achieve a specific mood, consistency, or brand aesthetic.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: VSCO's film emulation methodology is used by 200M+ users; Adobe's color grading tools are the industry standard; LACMA and major galleries use consistent color grading in documentary photography exhibitions
Impact: Color psychology research (Itten's color theory, validated by subsequent neuroaesthetics studies) shows that warm-shifted images are rated as more emotionally positive and trustworthy; consistent color grading increases brand recognition by 33% (Pantone/Forbes study)
Why best: Color grading transforms technically correct images into emotionally specific images. It is the difference between "accurate" and "intentional." Inconsistent color grading across a session or brand portfolio signals amateur work even when individual images are technically excellent. The craft is knowing which color relationships to reinforce or suppress to serve the emotional goal.
Steps
- Establish the mood target — Define the intended emotional quality: warm/intimate, cool/editorial, faded/nostalgic, high-contrast/dramatic. Every subsequent decision must serve this goal.
- Correct white balance first — Color grading is meaningless on images with uncorrected color casts. Ensure WB is neutral before grading; all creative color shifts are added on top of a corrected base.
- Set the tone curve — S-curve for contrast. Lift the blacks slightly (shadow fade/matte look) or crush them (deep blacks). Pull highlights down slightly for a film-like rolloff. The tone curve controls luminosity and sets the grading foundation.
- Adjust the HSL panel — Hue shifts each color range; Saturation boosts or mutes; Luminance brightens or darkens. For skin tones: check orange and red hue and saturation first. Shift orange hue toward red (+10-15) to warm skin; reduce orange saturation slightly to avoid oversaturation.
- Apply the color grader (color wheels) — Use Lightroom's Color Grading (or equivalent): add a warm tone (orange-yellow) to the Shadows wheel for a faded-film look; add a complementary cool (teal) to the Highlights wheel for a cinematic split tone. Midtones wheel sets the overall key.
- Check skin tones on a reference image — Open a close portrait; verify skin tones look healthy not orange, gray, or green. Use the HSL orange and red channels to correct without affecting the overall grade.
- Assess global saturation — Pull back global saturation if the grade feels oversaturated. Vibrance is preferable to Saturation for photographic images because it protects skin tones from oversaturation.
- Apply and sync to the session — Apply the grade to the reference image, then sync to all images from the same lighting setup. Review the synced images as a slideshow to confirm consistency; adjust outliers individually.
Rules
- Always grade from a corrected white balance — grading over a color cast produces inconsistent results across different shots with varying WB.
- Skin tones are the reference for any grade that includes people — if the grade makes skin look unhealthy, the grade must change.
- Vibrance, not Saturation, for portraits — Saturation clips skin tones; Vibrance protects them while boosting less-saturated colors.
- A consistent grade across a session is more important than a "perfect" grade on a single image — consistency is what makes a portfolio look professional.
Examples
Travel/lifestyle brand grade: Tone curve — slight S-curve, shadows lifted to RGB value 15 (matte look), highlights rolled off at 230. HSL — aquas/teals: hue -10 (shift toward teal), saturation +15. Oranges: hue +8 (warmer skin), saturation -8. Color grading wheels — Shadows: orange-amber tint at 15% strength. Highlights: teal-blue at 10% strength. Result: warm, sun-kissed look with cinematic teal-orange split tone consistent with travel brand aesthetic.
Common Mistakes
- Grading before correcting white balance — the grade builds on a flawed foundation; images with different WB will never look consistent.
- Over-saturating to make images "pop" — oversaturation looks artificial in print and on calibrated monitors; use Vibrance at +15-25 maximum.
- Applying the same grade preset to all image types — outdoor daylight and indoor mixed-light images require different base corrections before the same grade can be applied consistently.
- Never reviewing the grade on a calibrated display — grades applied on uncalibrated monitors produce images that look correct in the editing environment but wrong in delivery.
When NOT to Use
- When delivering images for scientific, forensic, or medical documentation purposes where color accuracy must be preserved and creative interpretation would compromise evidentiary integrity.
- When the client brief specifies straight color-correct processing (e.g., product catalog photography requiring exact color matching to physical samples).
- When images are destined for press/offset printing with a strict ICC profile workflow managed by the print production team, where creative grading applied before handoff will be overridden by print calibration.