How to make colors pop in Photoshop
I was having a conversation with a friend last night about Photoshop and how there are about 900 ways to do the same thing or variations on the same thing. Photoshop is such a versatile tool that I don’t think you can ever run out new options to discover.
My friend was looking for a method to make colors pop in pictures so here’s what I came up with. I have been experimenting with inverting layers and playing with blending a good bit lately to see what interesting things might result. There are already many tutorials on how to make colors pop out there, but maybe you’ll find this one has a slightly different effect. I’ve noticed it tends to emphasize Yellows a bit more than some approaches I’ve tried before.
| Before | After |
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You can download the action that I created for this, but if you’re curious about what it’s doing or you just like to do things the hard way, here are the steps:
- Open a copy of the photo that needs some enhancement
- Duplicate the background layer (Layer->Duplicate Layer) and name it Inverted
- Select Inverted and choose Image->Adjustments->Invert
- Change the Blending Mode on Inverted to Luminosity

- Duplicate the background layer again and name it Merged 1
- Select Inverted and choose Layer->Merge Down
- Change the Blending Mode on Merged 1 to Linear Dodge

- Duplicate the background layer again and name it Merged 2
- Select Merged 1 and merge down
- Change the Blending Mode on Merged 2 to Multiply
- Duplicate the background layer again and name it Color Pop
- Select Merged 2 and merge down
There you go! Your colors should be pretty saturated. At this point it’s a matter of playing with the Color Pop layer. You can tone it down by adjusting the Opacity, and you can also get some interesting effects by changing the Blending Mode:
- For pictures that started out “pastel” (not saturated and possibly over exposed), Multiply gave good results.

- For pictures that started out fairly well contrasted, Overlay and Soft Light had nice boosts.


- If seems that there’s too much yellow in your Color Pop layer, try Saturation



- For hyper saturation on an almost cartoony level, try Vivid Light.


While playing with this, I also found an interesting way to subdue the colors in an image for a nice washed out effect that doesn’t reduce the depth of your shadows. See the Subdued Color tutorial if you’re interested!











January 15th, 2008 at 1:30 pm
I would like to download the action to make colors more vibrant in photoshop, but the link doesn’t work.
July 11th, 2008 at 7:23 pm
The action link nolonger exists, can you make it available
June 28th, 2009 at 5:39 pm
also i would like to add.. there is a tool in the photoshop it changes the items colors easly
its the HUE .. its shortcut is : ctrl+U
you just can choose the area you want to change its colors and get the hue then you can play with the colors and get the color you need .. so nice tool
May 6th, 2010 at 2:57 am
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