How to Customize White Balance in MacBook Photos – Guide
Apple Photos app users can save money on third-party photo editing software by taking advantage of the Adjustment features. This tutorial explains how to use the Crop, Rotate, Filters and other tools available in the program to enhance photos.
Photos enables you to customize your images with light, color and black and white adjustments. By dragging the sliders, you can fine-tune your edits even further by accessing additional options for each adjustment tool.
light options
This tool lets you customize the lighting of your image, offering options to adjust the nuances.
Photos become more vivid when brightness is increased, as details are highlighted, dark areas lightened, and highlights added.
Photographs can be lightened or darkened with exposure, altering the overall look of the image.
Highlights can help bring out details in an overexposed photo. By adjusting the brightest parts of the image, it’s possible to reveal details that would otherwise be lost.
Dark areas of an image can be brightened up by using shadows, allowing for a more balanced look.
Photographers can adjust the luminosity of their images by altering the brightness levels.
Color Options
This tool boosts the vibrancy of your image, offering options to adjust hue, saturation and brightness.
Saturation alters the vibrancy of a photo, making colors appear brighter or more muted.
Vibration boosts the vibrancy of soft colors by evening out saturation in photos.
Projection technology can be used to correct any unwanted color or hue in an image, allowing for a more accurate representation.
Black and White Options
This option transforms photos into black and white images, with a range of options available.
Black and white tones can be adjusted in terms of intensity.
Neutral tones help to balance out the light and dark areas of an image.
The contrast of a photo can be altered by adjusting its tone.
Photographers can alter the texture of their images by adjusting the grain of the film.
Hold down the Option key while adjusting a slider to access a wider range of values. To undo any changes, double-click the slider.
Retouching can help you perfect photos, allowing you to erase blemishes, dust spots and other unwanted details. In the example above, I used retouching to remove elements from the cloth my baby was sitting on.
To adjust your image, use the slider or press the left and right brackets to retouch. Alternatively, click and drag the brush across the area you want to edit.
Photographers know it as red eyes: when a flash is used to take pictures of people, their pupils can appear red. To fix this, photographers can either click Auto to automatically remove the red eyes or manually adjust the circle size with the slider and click over the area.
Photographs can sometimes take on a color cast from lighting, window reflections, or other light sources. White balance can be used to correct this, restoring the whites and grays in the image to their true colors.
Users can select an option from a drop-down menu.
Neutral gray tones can help to create a balanced look in your photos, counteracting the warmth of the colors.
Skin Tone is a photo-editing tool that adjusts the temperature of an image to match the subject’s skin tone.
The photo’s warmth can be adjusted using a temperature/hue tool, which shifts the colors from blue to yellow or green to magenta.
You can manually adjust the white balance of your image by selecting one of three options: clicking or dragging the slider, or using the eyedropper button. Clicking on any area of the photo with the eyedropper will automatically adjust its gray area, skin tone, hue or temperature.
Final note
We hope you enjoyed our guide on customizing white balance in MacBook Photos. If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to reach out. Show your support by sharing this article with your friends!