Book Review: The Creative Digital Darkroom by Katrin Eismann and Sean Duggan
Published February 26, 2008
The Creative Digital Darkroom is more than just a how-to book on Adobe Lightroom or Photoshop. It is more than just a book about camera use and the fundamentals of visual composition. It is about the creative journey of creating visual images that take you beyond what others may see.
According to the authors, "the eye is the lens, and the mind is the camera." The small, often overlooked details are just as important as the vista and the goal of this book is to teach you how to see, not only what lies ahead, but what might lie ahead so that you can be ready for it when the opportunity presents itself. The book is 429 pages in length and is divided into 10 chapters.
Chapter 1, "Silver to Silicon," is about the transition from the traditional chemical darkroom into the digital darkroom. As time marches on, fewer and fewer people have ever experienced a chemical based development environment, but there is still a lot that can be learned from the techniques and terms that were first; pardon the pun, developed there. This chapter is also about the workflow from capture to print. Chapter 2, "Digital Nuts and Bolts" shows you that just as with a traditional darkroom, a digital darkroom can go from very modest to state of the art. Here you will learn how to build a digital darkroom with Photoshop, set up preferences, and efficiently navigate your files.
Chapter 3, "Scan, Develop, and Organize," are certainly procedural formalities by nature compared to taking the picture, but they are none the less, important steps. Here you will work with the first part image processing in the digital darkroom workflow. This is the part that happens before you bring the image into Photoshop. This will take you from digital capture, through file organization, and then into Camera Raw/Lightroom. Chapter 4, "File Preparation," shows you how to prime your image by reducing and avoiding noise, how to develop a sharpening strategy, how to correct optical and dimensional distortion, and in general, how to clean up your files.
Chapter 5, "Tone and Contrast," starts back at what was the traditional beginning for most wet darkroom photographers; black and white. By focusing on black and white, you will learn how to understand tone and contrast, levels and curves, as well as toning and split-toning effects. You will also learn how to listen to an image while learning how to apply global image improvements. Chapter 6, "Dodging, Burning, and Exposure Control," explain how brightness and contrast are important to designing the look of an image. By taking control away from the camera, you can create the image that you want.
Chapter 7, "Color Correction," examines the fact that because color is all around us, many times we take it for granted. In this chapter, the authors begin with the landscape of color in which they explain that there is no "true color" because there is many factors that allow us to perceive color. From there they tackle color correction, enhancement, and the power of working with Lab; a system that separates the brightness or luminance from the color in an image. Chapter 8, "Creative Color", compares color to the musical score of an image. Just as the score of a movie changes the way that you feel toward the movie, color correction can change how you feel toward an image. Remember that this does not excuse your ability to create a good image in the first place, only that with a good image it can make it better.
- Book Review: The Creative Digital Darkroom by Katrin Eismann and Sean Duggan
- Published: February 26, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Software, Sci/Tech: Computers, Culture: Photography, Books: Computers and Internet
- Part of a feature: The Enlightened Image
- Writer: T. Michael Testi
- T. Michael Testi's BC Writer page
- T. Michael Testi's personal site
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