August 2024

If you’re just starting out in landscape photography or even if you’ve been at it for a while, you may be making some key editing mistakes while processing your images after a shoot. Not every skilled photographer knows their way around Photoshop or Lightroom and there’s no shame in that.

What is a shame, however, is to keep making the same egregious editing mistakes again and again. And, according to photographer Andrea Livieri who runs a popular YouTube channel, the most common issue is overprocessing the sky.

“The sky is a key element in landscape photography, as it can create mood and depth in your images. However, many beginners tend to overprocess the sky, making it look unnatural and fake,” Livieri says.

“I know, working with colors and contrast can be a difficult thing to handle. It requires a lot of time and experimentation to master and refine. Especially when you’re first starting out. I’ve been there.”

He adds that a sky with oversaturated colors or too much contrast or one that is too dark will make your landscapes images look like they were shot by an amateur. Fortunately, there’s an easy way to accurately and effectively process the sky if you just avoid the six common editing mistakes he explains in the below video.

  1. Oversaturated Colors
  2. Ignoring the Color Balance
  3. Poor Sky Selection
  4. Wrong Clipped Highlights Recovery
  5. Over-Contrasted Sky
  6. Too Noisy Sky

“Most of them are about finding the right balance between too much and too little of something,” he says. “So, by the end of this tutorial, you’ll know how to get a compelling and natural sky in your landscape images.”

Check out the video tutorial below where Livieri shows you examples of these mistakes and explains how to correct for them. You can read his full article on this subject here.

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