![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjg7p7Zrduwn8soYosJKc2hqGDlm_cOc2gywDC5zQEr-ssh0QvztctnlA94RgIqpE9Gv7SXZArl2J21vbEJSrwwED3AG54upyyf1U5Yf8Owfigl3StcneQKz1tuPty_a48dIN1GSmGCiNU/s400/Colorful-Antigua.jpg)
Today’s image was just about having fun. First thing to be done was to make a mask to separate the sky from the foreground. I guess I just haven’t accepted the ease of using the Refine Mask feature of Photoshop CS5 yet, because I fell back into using the Calculations dialog box found in Image/Calculations. After running through several iterations of possible combinations I came close by combining the Blue Channel with the Red Channel using Hard Light as the Blend Mode. One of the nice things about the Calculations dialog is that it gives you a new Channel. Once I had the first pass I went for another round and came up with a pretty clean mask. A little checking and fixing a few stray pixels and the mask was done.
With the mask complete and out of the way I took another copy of the shot and set up for the dense clouds that are actually in the original shot. With the clouds looking menacing in the second copy of the shot I just pulled the number two shot over into the number one shot (the one with the mask already set up). For the next step all that was required was applying the Channel to a new Layer Mask and the basic image was there.
In going through the “normal” Hue/Saturation Adjustment Layer sequence of saturating each color (Red, Yellow, Green, Cyan, Blue, and Magenta), the only thing considered was how the saturation effected the foreground. If saturating a color had too much influence on the sky, the same Layer Mask was used in place of the Mask that came along with the Hue/Saturation Adjustment Layer, keeping the sky reasonably “normal”.
With the sharpening Layer (using a High Pass Filter sharpening) the same Layer Mask was employed to prevent the clouds for being sharpened. Clouds are soft, puffy things and I tend to keep them that way. I don’t typically see any point to sharpening clouds.
I vignette using an unsharpened copy of the final image is applied with the center knocked out using the Rectangular Marquee Tool with the feather set to about 133% of the Resolution setting. In the case of most of my images that would be a 200 pixel feather, based on a full size Resolution of 150 PPI.