With the Brush Tool, I go over the dead grass at 100% opacity. Select the Color Picker, set to a Sample Size of 11 Average, and then choose a nice median green with the eye dropper. With my selection still marqueed, I create a new separate layer. When all the yellow grass is selected, I click OKAY, now the Color Range of the dead grass is selected. And yes, it started selecting Winston, but chill, I deal with that later. With the eye dropper, I select some of the yellow grass, now this isn’t going to grab all the dead stuff since it ranges in color and tone so I select the Add to Dropper and select the rest of the dead yellow grass. I zoom into the photo a bit ( shortcut: ALT+mouse scroll wheel) and then click Select -> Color Range. I want lush greenery! This a puppy shoot after all so I want things fresh. The image is done and ready to go except I don’t love the dead grass. I went ahead and I cloned out the leaf – it was distracting – and did my usual workflow. Since I skipped the usual Lightroom/Raw edit step, here are the technical deets: 1/2000 sec at f/2.8, ISO 500 taken with a 50mm 1.4 lens. (The only things I did in Lightroom before the import was adjust the color temperature and then added +61 exposure). So, I’ve imported the RAW file into Photoshop. I can honestly say that besides this one photo, I didn’t have to touch up the yard one bit (I’ve had sessions where the yard has just been scalped – ek) except for this one photo where is plopped down in some sunbeaten grass. I’m going to be using a photo from Winston, the lovable puppy, who I might add lives in the most amazing houses and yards I have ever seen. Plus, it uses one of my favorite “fixers”, a little underused (IMO) blending mode that really deserves more love. Not only is it easy and practical, it also puts the greenery back in the grass without look artificial or overdone. Desert living, eh?! Like I was saying, to grow grass, you need to seed and plant it for the season which means during the spring or fall season, you might run the chance of coming across yards in transition. If you’ve never had to the pleasure of visiting Arizona, it could best be described as flat sand covered in concrete. Here in the Metro-Phoenix area of Arizona, grass is not a natural occurrence.
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