Underwater photos, equipment, recreational and technical diving blog

Backscatter action for Adobe Photoshop

Another common problem for underwater photographers (particulaly those without strobes) is backscatter.  Just like the action that I posted that is good at fixing the loss of colours that happens underwater, there is also a very good action for removing backscatter.  I won’t go into much details, a video tutorial can be see here.  Here are before and after shots of what the action can do:

Before:

Backscatter Before

After:

Backscatter After

The action is by Daniel Brown and can be downloaded here

Edited Gozo Photos

Following the discovery of the underwater action for Adobe Photoshop, I have re-edited some of my Gozo photos from this year and last year.  Only some of the photos actually look better once the action has been applied, others I have left as they where when I originally did them.

Editing Underwater Photos with Photoshop CS3

I haven’t posted anything recently but I have been playing around more with my photos in Photoshop CS3.  I edit the better photos that I take with Photoshop CS3 to put back the red that is lost when diving.  Up until now I’ve had a variety of results – you can see the latest Gozo photos below.  I’ve now come across a action for Photoshop CS3 which has produced very different results, so I decided to post a comparison.

Here is the original, straight from my camera without any edits:

Here is the same photo edit the way I have always done it, by applying filters in Photoshop.  The colours are better, but still not quite there.

Here is the edit using the new ‘Underwater’ action I have discovered for Photoshop:

There is a great improvement in the colours using the Underwater action.  Not only are there improvments in terms of colour but also filesize (something to consider when posting images on the web), it’s almost 50% smaller. The fullsize original, pre-edit was 3.33MB, post-edit 1.47MB.

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