Magic Bullet Parametric Curve

Tool Controls

Apply Curve To lets you select the channel(s) to which your curve changes apply. This control defaults to RGB, but you can also isolate individual Red, Green, or Blue channels as well as address alpha singly or in tandem with RGB (as RGBA). Below, we show the same curve used in our "hero" image atop this guide's cover page. However, whereas that first image applied our curve to RGB, this version specifically isolates Red. Note that some curve changes affect the channel's opposite color, which, in this case, is green. Hence, we see more green dominance in the shadows.

You might also notice how the curve line on our overlay graph turns red when we select the Red channel. To make the UI that much more intuitive, Green turns the line green and Blue turns the line, well, lavender that self-identifies as blue.

The Apply Inverse Curve checkbox applies the mirror opposite of your current curve to the selected channel. Below, we show a curve applied to the Green channel (left) and then its inverse (right).

Overlay

Control Points

>Enable 1/2/3/4/5. The default is three, but Parametric Curve allows you to employ up to five points in your line for exceptional color control.

Position X/Y sets the location of your point along the given axis. Note that the position 0, 0 is in the bottom-left corner and 100, 100 is in the top-right. Negative values extending off the overlay are allowed.

Angle sets the angle of your point's tangent line. A 0 or 180 value yields a perfectly vertical tangent line.

Tangent A/B governs the distance between your control point and its endpoints. Below, you see the difference between values of 10 (left) and 80 (right) in just one of our Tangent A parameters.