How to Edit Like a Pro with KeroSoft PhotoEditor
KeroSoft PhotoEditor is a compact but powerful image editor that balances intuitive tools with pro-level controls. This guide takes you step-by-step through a pro workflow—covering setup, non-destructive editing, color correction, retouching, composition, and exporting—so you can create polished images quickly and consistently.
1. Start with the Right Setup
- Workspace: Choose the “Photography” workspace (or customize panels) so histogram, layers, and adjustment tools are visible.
- Preferences: Set color management to sRGB for web images and Adobe RGB/ProPhoto RGB for print. Enable GPU acceleration if available for smoother performance.
- Raw vs JPEG: Import RAW files when possible—RAW preserves more detail and dynamic range for corrections.
2. Use Non-Destructive Editing
- Layers and Adjustment Layers: Apply exposure, curves, color balance, and other changes as adjustment layers rather than directly editing pixels. This keeps edits reversible.
- Smart Objects (if supported): Convert layers to smart objects before applying filters so you can tweak filter settings later.
- Snapshots/History: Take a snapshot at major milestones to compare edits and revert easily.
3. Basic Exposure and Tone Corrections
- Histogram-first approach: Check the histogram to ensure you’re not clipping highlights or shadows.
- Exposure: Begin with a global exposure or levels adjustment to set the overall brightness.
- Shadows/Highlights: Use targeted shadow/highlight sliders to recover detail without flattening contrast.
- Curves for contrast: Create an S-curve on a Curves adjustment layer to add punch while preserving midtones.
4. Precision Color Grading
- White balance: Correct white balance using the eyedropper on a neutral area, then fine-tune temperature and tint.
- HSL/Selective Color: Target problem colors (e.g., green cast in foliage) with HSL adjustments—reduce saturation or shift hue selectively.
- Split toning: Add subtle warm tones to highlights and cool tones to shadows for a cinematic look; keep effect strength low (5–15%).
5. Sharpening and Noise Reduction
- Noise reduction first: Apply denoising before sharpening—especially important for high ISO RAW files. Use luminance and color noise sliders conservatively to avoid plasticky results.
- Selective sharpening: Use a mask to sharpen only edges and textured areas (eyes, hair, fine details) while protecting smooth skin or skies.
- Unsharp Mask/High Pass: For final micro-contrast, apply a High Pass filter at low radius (0.5–2 px) on a duplicate layer and set blend mode to Overlay or Soft Light.
6. Retouching Portraits Like a Pro
- Frequency separation: Use frequency separation to separately edit texture and tone for natural skin smoothing without losing pores.
- Spot healing & clone stamp: Remove blemishes, stray hairs, and sensor dust with spot healing; use clone stamp for larger fixes.
- Dodge & burn: Subtly dodge (lighten) and burn (darken) to shape facial features and add depth—work on a 50% gray layer set to Overlay at low opacity.
7. Improve Composition and Cropping
- Crop for impact: Use the rule of thirds or golden ratio overlay to recrop for stronger composition. Keep aspect ratio in mind for final use (Instagram, print, etc.).
- Straighten & lens corrections: Correct horizon lines and apply lens profile corrections to remove distortion and vignetting.
- Content-aware fill/patch: Remove distracting objects and fix backgrounds using content-aware tools.
8. Creative Effects (Subtlety Wins)
- Vignettes: Add a subtle vignette to draw attention to the subject; keep feathering high and opacity low.
- Film emulation & LUTs: Use film presets or LUTs sparingly—stack with opacity to blend into your base edit.
- Selective color pops: For a dramatic look, desaturate the background slightly while keeping subject colors vibrant.
9. Consistent Batch Editing
- Presets: Save frequently used adjustments as presets to speed up workflow on similar shoots.
- Sync settings: Apply the same base edits across a series, then make per-image tweaks.
- Automated export: Use batch export templates for different sizes and formats (web, print, social).
10. Exporting for the Right Medium
- File formats: Use TIFF or PSD for master files, JPEG for web/social (quality 80–90), and PNG for images needing transparency.
- Color space: Export in sRGB for web; use Adobe RGB/ProPhoto for print with proper soft-proofing.
- Sharpen for output: Apply output-specific sharpening—different settings for screen vs print.
Quick 10-Step Checklist
- Import RAW, set workspace and color profile.
- Create a snapshot.
- Correct exposure and white balance.
- Recover shadows/highlights.
- Apply targeted color adjustments.
- Reduce noise, then sharpen selectively.
- Retouch skin and remove distractions.
- Crop and straighten.
- Add subtle creative effects.
- Save master, export final versions for each use.
Use these steps as a baseline and tweak based on your style. With practice, KeroSoft PhotoEditor will help you produce professional, consistent images while keeping your workflow efficient.
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