Tone
Tone refers to the overall presentation of brightness levels and contrast in a photo. It determines the viewer’s immediate visual impression. Tone is influenced by the lighting conditions at the time of shooting, the inherent light and dark characteristics of the subject, as well as post-processing adjustments.
Feature
Description
Exposure
Controls the overall brightness of the entire image. Drag to the right to brighten the image, or to the left to darken it.
Contrast
Adjusts the difference between light and dark areas. Higher values create a more defined, punchy look, while lower values produce a softer appearance.
Brightness
Adjusts the midtones only, without affecting the brightest highlights or darkest shadows.
Highlight
Targets the brightest areas of the image (such as skies or reflections). Useful for reducing overexposure and recovering lost details.
Shadow
Targets the darkest areas of the image. Useful for brightening shadow regions and revealing more detail.
White
Controls the upper limit of the brightest tones, helping prevent highlight clipping and loss of detail.
Black
Controls the lower limit of the darkest tones, helping prevent shadows from becoming completely black with no detail.
sharpness
Enhances fine details and makes the image appear sharper; reducing it softens the overall look.
Vibrance
Intelligently boosts color intensity, making colors more vivid while avoiding oversaturation and preserving natural skin tones.
Saturation
Directly adjusts the intensity of all colors. Higher values make colors more vivid, while lower values create a more muted look.
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White Balance
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Curves