Picture Style: Picture Style Effects: Auto: The color tone will be adjusted automatically to suit the scene. The colors will look vivid, especially for blue skies, greenery, and sunsets in nature, outdoor, and sunset scenes. Standard: The image looks vivid, sharp, and crisp. This is a general-purpose Picture Style suitable for most scenes. Here, you can create your own style by adjusting the sharpness, contrast, saturation and colour tone parameters on the camera (via the Picture Style menu option), or alternatively you may want to visit Canon’s dedicated Picture Style website where a selection of other styles are made available ready to download onto your DSLR.
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Adjusting Picture Styles
Your camera probably has a second setting to help you control the way that the equipment records color. Canon calls it 'Picture Style,' but other manufacturers have their own terminology. Here are a few of the popular brands and their names for this function:
- Nikon: Picture Control
- Sony: Creative Style
- Pentax: Custom Image
- Olympus: Picture Mode
I'm a Canon user and accustomed to using the Picture Style function, so I'll use that term through the rest of this article.
The Picture Style setting is the digital equivalent of film type. When shooting with film, you can select the type of film that suits your subject. For example, Fuji Velvia is popular with landscape photographers because of its low ISO and saturated colors. However, that effect is a bit strong for portraits, so a portrait photographer would choose a film designed for portraits, such as Kodak Portra. Portrait films generally create softer, less saturated images and are designed to render skin tones in a flattering way. If you want to take a black-and-white photo, then you need to use black-and-white film.
Obviously, digital cameras don't have film that you can change; instead, you achieve various effects by changing the Picture Style. The latest Canon EOS cameras offer six Picture Style settings (see Figure 3): Standard, Landscape, Portrait, Monochrome, Faithful, and Neutral. The first three settings are the ones that you're likely to use the most: The Standard Picture Style is designed for general use, the Landscape Picture Style enhances green and blue tones such as grass and blue sky, and the Portrait Picture Style creates good skin tones.
Figure 3 Picture Style options available on Canon EOS cameras.
Nikon cameras have similar names for their Picture Control settings: Standard, Neutral, Vivid, Monochrome, Portrait, and Landscape. The names make each setting fairly clear. If your Nikon camera lacks some of these Picture Controls, you can download them from the Nikon website.
Damon challenger rv owners manual downloads. One really useful Picture Style feature is that you can alter the settings to suit the look you're trying to create. Most Canon Picture Styles have four parameters that you can alter (see Figure 4): sharpness, contrast, color saturation, and color tone. Nikon Picture Controls are similar, giving you the additional option of adjusting brightness.
Figure 4 Most Picture Styles have four adjustable parameters.
The Monochrome Picture Style and Monochrome Picture Control work differently; instead of adjusting color saturation and hue, you can dial in colored filter and toning effects (see Figure 5).
Figure 5 The Monochrome Picture Style has color filter and toning effects instead of color saturation and color tone parameters.
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Japanese Picture Style
With film cameras, the look of the photo depends on the film you select. For example, Fuji Velvia (recently discontinued) was favoured by landscape photographers to create high contrast, saturated colour slides. Kodak Portra is a colour negative film designed to give flattering skin tones. And if you want to shoot in black and white, you have to use black and white film.
With digital cameras, you achieve the same effect using Canon Picture Styles (other manufacturers have different names for the same thing). Your camera, assuming it’s not an older model that predates Picture Styles, has six built-in. Of these, you would probably use three the most – Standard (for general shooting), Landscape and Portrait. Neutral and Faithful are designed to deliver low contrast JPEG files for processing in Photoshop. The last, Monochrome, is for black and white photos.
There are two ways to use Picture Styles:
1. If you use the JPEG format, your images are processed according to the parameters of the selected Picture Style. You can’t change Picture Style afterwards.
2. If you use the Raw format, and process the file in DPP, you can apply a Picture Style at the processing stage. This gives you the option of selecting the Picture Style that suits the image best after you have taken it.
If you use Raw and process the file in the latest versions of Adobe Photoshop or Lightroom, the software gives you the option of using Canon’s Standard, Landscape, Portrait, Faithful and Neutral Picture Styles, but no others.
Romantic Picture Style
You are not limited to the Picture Styles included with your camera. Canon has created seven more Picture Styles that you can download here. Once downloaded, you can transfer them to your camera or use them with Digital Photo Professional. The instructions are on the Canon website at the above link.
Kevin Wang is a photographer who has created his own Picture Styles using the Picture Style Editor, software supplied on the CD that comes with EOS cameras. You can see some of the photos that he’s created with his Picture Styles on his Flickr photostream here. If you would like to use any of his Picture Styles yourself, you can buy them for $US9.99 each. The details are at the above link.
You can also download three of Kevin’s Picture Styles for free by going to this interview with the photographer on the Canon Hong Kong website (there is also some advice on creating your own Picture Styles in the Picture Style Editor). I downloaded these Picture Styles and used them to process the portraits accompanying this article.
Yamato Picture Style
If you upload Kevin’s Picture Styles to your camera, you can use them as is or you can adjust them by going into the Detail settings. Here you can alter the sharpness, contrast, saturation and colour tone of the Picture Style, and save them as a new User Defined Picture Style if you wish. You can also do this with the built-in or additional Canon Picture Styles.
If you process your Raw files in DPP you can adjust the image brightness, white balance, contrast, sharpness, colour saturation and colour tone to suit the image. This method gives you the most flexibility, and also allows you to use new Picture Styles with old files (this is covered in detail in my ebook Understanding DPP).
Photographer Bruce Dorn has created a series of video tutorials about Picture Styles and the Picture Style Editor software for Canon. The tutorials explain the points I’ve touched on in this article in detail. They also show you how to use the Picture Style Editor to create your own Picture Styles. You can view the tutorials here.
Here are some more photos processed with the Kevin Wang Picture Styles:
Japanese Picture Style
Romantic Picture Style
Canon Eos Picture Style Download
Yamato Picture Style
Japanese Picture Style
Romantic Picture Style
Canon Custom Picture Styles Images
Yamato Picture Style