Everything you need to know about Saturation
Saturation adjusts the intensity and vibrancy of colors in your image. Increase saturation to make colors more vivid and punchy, or decrease it to create muted, desaturated looks – all the way down to complete grayscale.
Parameters
- Saturation
Controls color intensity. At 0, no change is applied. Negative values (-1 to 0) reduce saturation, with -1 producing a fully grayscale image. Positive values (0 to +1) boost saturation, with +1 doubling the color intensity for maximum vibrancy.
How It Works
The filter calculates the luminance (grayscale version) of each pixel, then interpolates between that grayscale value and the original color. Decreasing saturation blends toward grayscale; increasing saturation pushes colors further away from gray, making them more vivid.
Saturation Values
- -1.0 – Complete grayscale (no color)
- -0.5 – Muted, desaturated colors
- 0 – No change (original colors)
- +0.5 – Noticeably more vivid colors
- +1.0 – Maximum saturation (doubled intensity)
Tips
- Use subtle increases (+0.1 to +0.3) to add pop without looking over-processed
- Reduce saturation (-0.2 to -0.5) for moody, cinematic, or vintage looks
- Full desaturation (-1.0) creates a quick grayscale conversion
- For more selective color control, use HSL or Channel Mixer