 Hello everyone, welcome back to another Adobe Photoshop tutorial. This one I'm going to show you how to add color, or more correctly, add a tint to your footage or to your picture in this instance. And I'm going to show you how to do that doing two methods. They're both quite good. You'll see here this is a black and white image and basically we're going to go and make a filter on this bad boy, but instead of using those built-in filters at Instagram and all that has, we're going to do it the old-fashioned way. You can also have a little bit more accuracy this way, right? You can get the look you're going for. So let's just dig right in. First step, I've opened up a basic image here. Stay focused. Black and white, as you can see. You guys want to follow along with the exact image. The link will be in the description. The next step here is we're going to go ahead and add color using a hue and saturation layer. So let's just go down here and presto. We're going to do an adjustment layer. Well, that's a little bit more accurate. We're going to create a new adjustment layer, hue and saturation. Make sure you are clicked on your layer. Left click on this bad boy down here and then go to hue and saturation. Now, like I said, we want to add color. And when you look at this, there is no color applied. Please do not panic. You need to push the colorize little checkbox here and bang, we have an automatic color applied. Now, unless you're doing a horror movie or unless blue is your color, you know, maybe you don't want to go with blue. Maybe you want to go with an old-school look. Maybe you want to go with like a yellowy tinted sepia type look. So you guys can adjust the hue up here. And as you see, as I go left to right, you're going to get, you know, the blue all the way down to the old yellowy faded look. Now, there are a couple of other things I want to show you here. Let's just go with yellow for a bit here because it's a bit easier. You can adjust the saturation. So if you want it really, really saturated or you want that orangey look, or you can go with very, very, very subtle. So if you were to go down to like, say 15%, you know, it's not a black and white photo, but it's pretty damn close because it's been hiding in a book for 130 years or something like that. Anyways, season it to your taste. These sliders here are completely adjustable. I will also mention that you can use custom presets. And I will just click on a few of them here, cyanotope. They automatically apply the preset. So you'll see here that the colorize is selected for cyanotope. But if I go down to, let's see, sepia. Okay, sepia is okay. Well, maybe all of these are. No, yellow boost. I knew there was one that wasn't yellow boost, for example, is not. So you'll kind of have to click colorize. And then you'll notice that it kind of, you know, it throws off the slider. So again, guys, just something to keep in mind. This is the first way to add some basic color or tinting to a footage to your image. Pardon me. And you're not using a Instagram filter. I'm going to delete this layer. And I'm going to show you the second way. So I'm just going to delete it off. She goes. All right, guys. The second way is you want to make sure you're clicked on the layer again. We're going to create another adjustment layer, but you're going to see, where is it? It's in here somewhere. Photo filter. This is also very, very cool. If you left click on that, it automatically selects warming filter as your original filter. But again, there are all sorts of drop downs here for ready-made filters. Now, of course, you can go ahead and customize and create your own filters, which we'll talk about in another video. But again, this is the second and also equally awesome way to start creating filters or put a filter or a tint on yours. So let's click on red. Okay, you'll see that we've applied a red color cast to it. It automatically defaults to 25%. Let's jack that bad boy up to 70%. That is pretty red. I'm going to unclick preserve luminosity because that basically affects the level of white in the image. So in this case, it's got a completely different, oh geez, hub spot. It's got a completely different white balance and a different color there. So again, guys, do as you see fit. This is just two really, really quick ways to start adding in some color. Ooh, that's pretty dense. It's actually very similar to the previous preset that we had in the other one. But anyways, guys, this is how you do it. If you have any questions or if there's any videos that you want to see in particular, just hit me up. Happy to record them. That's it for this one, guys. Hope you enjoyed it. I'll be back soon.