Use this after a normal B&W conversion to add depth and slight warmth.
Is it black & white? Or is it color? This leaves a wisp of color, just a hint, for a unique vintage look.
A very useful midtone brightener.
Raises the shadow values without affecting the highlights as much, version 1.
Run this BEFORE a B&W effect to brighten and smooth skin color. Works best on redder or ruddy skin tones. Not meant to be used on a color image.
The subtle color palette of your favorite films. Do you remember film?
Gentle enough to be used everyday but adds that punch that makes images pop.
A new rich black and white conversion that tends to lighten the skin tones, try it.
A subtle everyday type effect that works great to enhance colors, especially blue skies.
A simple tool to darken the edges evenly in a rectangular shape. Different from an oval vignette.
One of our favorite B&W conversions. More than version 1 in warmth and punch.
This adds punch but is tuned to reduce over saturation of skin tones.
For those that like cross-processed looks but with less blue in the shadows and more pleasing skin tones than a traditional cross-processed effect.
A bold vignette that allows for interactive sizing and placement.
Similar to our Starburst vignette in V2, but this has more points for more internal image area and automatically sizes to the full border of your image.
A very rich, subtly warm, black & white look that has snap and contrast. The toning is only in the shadows, maintaining clean highlight areas.
Attempt to fix images shot with the wrong white balance settings.
A bright-light version of a cross-process look.
The closest thing to straight B&W you will find here.
Mimics the deep romantic feel of the movie. It adds color richness, a soft glowing effect and contrast.