How to use the Dehaze tool in Adobe CC – N-Photo 164 video tutorial

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If you have an image that looks hazy – either through atmospheric haze in summer or shrouded in mist in winter – the Dehaze command does a great job of cutting through the mist, crisping up distant details and boosting hazy scenes. It’s easy to use: simply open your image in either Photoshop CC's Camera Raw or Lightroom and experiment with the slider. More interestingly, the slider goes in both directions so not only can we use it to cut through haze, but we can also add the impression of mist to our photos.

One of the challenges with landscape photography is in reducing busy scenes into simple, strong compositions. Fog, mist or low-lying cloud can help in this regard as it fades out the background details so the foreground elements stand out. 

Of course, it’s best to capture haze at the time of shooting. But if conditions aren’t right, we can use negative Dehaze to give a subtle impression of mist afterwards. With the AI masking tools contained in Camera Raw, it’s a simple task. Here, the forest scene we captured initially looks too busy and cluttered, but by hazing the background, we are able to produce a much stronger image.

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James Paterson

The lead technique writer on Digital Camera MagazinePhotoPlus: The Canon Magazine and N-Photo: The Nikon Magazine, James is a fantastic general practice photographer with an enviable array of skills across every genre of photography. 

Whether it's flash photography techniques like stroboscopic portraits, astrophotography projects like photographing the Northern Lights, or turning sound into art by making paint dance on a set of speakers, James' tutorials and projects are as creative as they are enjoyable. 

He's also a wizard at the dark arts of Photoshop, Lightroom and Affinity Photo, and is capable of some genuine black magic in the digital darkroom, making him one of the leading authorities on photo editing software and techniques.