![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg-ZOXun-w2bnhGGnbwvx3vU_nBtTHcszTXwwaIj8WYraHxPHxz5mwrD6tq3Hz8M4uPghyphenhyphenHkNphPMKPPMDU5FQY5BDQxdTHaYh8rn9SQAArlOR2swGz2nHKW4yjKx32Uwf2G8mpS-nlIMM/s400/Motocross-racer-rounding-the-corner.jpg)
The first thing was a crop. The shot was taken as in a landscape (horizontal) format, but looks much better as a vertical. In LR3, when using the Crop Tool, some people I've talked to have said they get frustrated trying to get the ratio to go vertical from its default horizontal. The "trick" is the X key. In Photoshop, tapping the X Key flips the foreground and background colors. In Lightroom, the X Key flips the horizontal and vertical orientation of the Crop Tool. One of many different shortcut keys between LR3 and CS5. The height wasn't changed by more than a few pixels, but the width was brought in tight.
It was a bright, sunny day and I didn't want to remove the shadows from the rider and bike. I just wanted to open them up ever so slightly. The right (in the image) side of the rider and the engine area of the bike itself were tagged with the Adjustment Brush (two separate selections) with Auto Mask turned on. I went through an explanation of how I use the Adjustment Brush on June 9th. http://kayviewgallery.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2011-06-23T07%3A10%3A00-04%3A00&max-results=7 The big takeaway was that you should use as many individual Adjustment Brush area as you need. Each of the two areas was lightened to just barely show the detail in the shadow.
The next place the Adjustment Brush was used was on the goggles. The result is that it appears that you can see the rider's face in the shadow. You can't really, but it does give that impression. It just opens it up it up a little bit.
The image was sharpened, a vignette applied and one last Adjustment Brush detail was added. A big, fat, soft brush was used to bring the dirt in the upper left down enough to provide a vignette there.
Everything was done in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3. It's one of the few images you'll see at The Kayview Gallery that hasn't had something replaced, altered, flipped, switched or anything else that needs to be done in a pixel altering program.