

To lighten a photo in Affinity, use the Photo program instead of Designer. With that said, how do you use software like Affinity Designer to lighten a Photo?


Step 1.When you need to brighten a photo, there’s few better software to use than Affinity. So we’re going to save our neutral gray, noisy fill so that we can use it at any point to create a noise layer or shape for clipping. One is specific to my favorite seamless pattern colors, another is for my floral illustrations and I have one, really broad one of “Go to Colors.” ( admittedly, that one is a bit outta control so I don’t recommend that) I have several application wide palettes set up based on my needs. As you would expect, document palettes are specific to whatever document you created them in and application wide are available in the current and future documents. In Affinity Designer, you have the ability to create either a document or an application wide palette. What if I want to use this in future documents? Do I need to start over each time? Nope! Read on… Creating an Application Wide Swatch There is no change to the color because neutral gray, on Overlay, won’t adjust my color. The first one shows a side by side comparison of my green leaf shape with nothing clipped to it (left side), compared to one where I added a neutral gray leaf shape over the top (HSL 0,0,50) set to Overlay.

Using a neutral gray color will ensure that the colors beneath my noise layer won’t be impacted. I want a fill color that is completely neutral because I plan to use the Overlay blend mode when using my noise layer. It doesn’t matter what shape you use, it just needs to be something you can add a fill to. The benefit of creating a neutral noise fill is that it let’s me easily create a noise layer that covers everything it’s clipped to, rather than having to do it shape by shape.Īlright, let’s get started… Using a Neutral Fill Colorįirst things first, create a shape. So I wanted to create this quick tutorial on how to create a neutral noise Fill that you can have on hand, to use as an overlay, whenever you need it. While Designer doesn’t have a Noise filter, it DOES have a way of adding noise… it’s just not obvious. Noise is a lot of creative power packed in to a relatively boring adjustment. Sometimes you just need a little noise right? Even if it’s just to give your digital work a little more of an analog feel. Pretty cool, right? The one thing it’s missing though? Live Filters, which are non destructive, creative adjustments like lighting, rippling, blurs, and, in the case of my class, noise. While creating a recent Skillshare class, using Affinity Photo to create digital cyanotypes, it occurred to me that the process could also be created using Affinity Designer as it’s packed with many of the same adjustments layers that Photo, making it incredibly versatile to use.
