Audio Visual · Digital Printing Group · Cameras
Photography Tips

The Orton Effect

by
Timothy Farmer
August 26, 2024
What is the orton effect and how to do it

Sometimes you must give the customers what they want.Recently I had a request for some of my landscape images but with that soft dreamy look. I shoot with Nisi Black Mist filters, but they wanted something a little more. So, I investigated what they were talking about. I remember teaching about the Orton effect and quickly realized that is what they wanted.

For those who do not know, the Orton effect comes from a Canadian photographer, Michael Orton, from back in the 80’s. He would shoot and use a few sheets of film to get a dreamy glow to his work. With the advent of digital, it is an easy effect to achieve and if not overdone, can look very nice. You still have a sharp image, but with a softness to it.

When I first started doing landscape photography after moving from commercial work, I played around with it, but at the time my gear really couldn’t hold up to the process (or maybe I was so accustomed to the clean,sharp commercial look and I never quite liked it).

Over the last few years of landscape shooting, my style has changed,and I’ve been looking to bringing this effect back into my workflow, so I was more than happy to accommodate my client. The Black Mist is a great filter to use and will give you some of that feel but doing it in post will give you a little more control.

So here is how you can achieve it in your work.

Start will a well exposed and good-looking photo. Open in Photoshop(or editing software of your choice that allows you to use layers, gaussian blur,contrast and brightness adjustments).

Step one and two:Duplicate and lighten duplicated layer.

Step three: Apply gaussian blur so image is no longer recognizable but not totally distorted. A good rule of thumb is to use blur amount at about the size of your file. This image was taken with an R5 at 45MP so I used a radius of about 45 pixels.

Step Four: Adjust contrast and lighten. Contrast around 75 and brightness around 20-25 are good places to start but play around until you find what looks good.

Finally step, adjust layer by using fill slider, I fine between 20% & 30% usually looks good.

I find this effect can be nice if not overused. It adds a nice atmospheric look to an image, and it can really help out on contrasty days when the light is a little harsh. You can find other ways of doing this, but I like this straightforward approach, and it is easy. You don’t need to buy someone else’s presets.