Posterization Plugin Tutorial
Posterization Plugin Tutorial
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Posterization
filter controls
Posterize lightness-values
Posterize color hues
Shift selection colors
Change output colors
Blend the posterized with the original
Tutorial
Tutorial as pdf
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The Posterization filter plugin works with these image modes (Windows and Mac)...
8 & 16 bit / channel: RGB, Grayscale, Duotone, CMYK, Multichannel, Lab.
Products overview
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Example - one
color and full
range of
brightness
levels
Force Black
Force White
Force Black will set the darkest level to be as near black as possible. Force white will similarly set the brightest to near
white. This is usefull as a basic contrast enhancement.
Like value divisions, this Hue divisions divides the image into
equidistant groups, but now the criteria is color hue and the hues
placement in a full colorcircle. If you set it to 0, then you turn hue
divisions off.
Example of
equidistant hues
Selection shift
Original
3 hue divisions
3 hue divisions
selection shift 50
This slider changes the criteria for selecting areas of the original image. If you shift three divisions 50% you go from
selecting cyan, magenta and yellow, to selecting red, green and blue. See illustration above.
Amount
Mode
Amount determines if and how much the posterized image should be mixed with the original. Mode determines in what
way they should be mixed.
Less than 100% will mix more or less with the original.
100% is pure filtered image.
Above 100% enhances the filtereffect.
Hue change
Hue change will alter the output colors, not the selection. If you have selected cyan, magenta, yellow, then you can change
these to red, green, blue, for example, but it will still be the same parts of the original image. If you have a colorcircle and
set the value divisions and hue divisions to 0, you can see this slider rotate the colors inside the colorwheel.
Mode
This is a menu with the relevant standard Photoshop blending modes. It determines how to mix the posterized image with
the original. The algorithms for these were pubished by Adobe some years ago on the internet.
Instead of doing Amount and Mode here, you could do the same in Photoshop by working on a layer that is a copy of the
original. Filter it 100% and as Normal. Then in Photoshops Layers panel you can set the mode there and transparency
(amount of blending).
Whats nice about having it in the plugin, is you can do it all in one go and see the effect of various posterization settings for
a specific blending mode. Otherwise you would have to create many layers and filter each individually.
In these examples we set value divisions to 0, which will preserve all brightness values intact.
Images like this have their own beauty, but are most usefull as a layer blended with the original to articulate its main
masses of color.
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Original image
One color
We could also set Hue change to -60 to get the same color as the original lotus. In
the rightmost example we used Selection shift instead.
There is a beautifull luminous poetry in these monochromes...
Selection shift 70
Two colors
Tend to produce stark results, since two equidistant colors will allways be
complementary and agitate each other and, perhaps, irritate the eye...
Three colors
Three hues are more harmoneous. However we have to shift the selection criteria
in order to avoid the splitting up of the background.
The original is a natural triad, so we should be able to posterize it into three hues...
Selection shift 88
Hue change 10
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The blending
modes
Original photo
Normal
Multiply
Screen
Overlay
Soft light
Hard light
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Darken
Lighten
Further information
Watercolor
Please go to the tutorial Creating a watercolor look for an example of a specific use of the posterizer in combination with
other Power Retouches.