That is more or less what I do anyway, though not always as successful as your illustrations, also, Qimage default is so good all that usually it is not necessary to do much 'fiddling'
I will have a fiddle later and see what.
You are absolutely right, Jeff.
I actually spent days trying to find an image that was weird enough so I could use to demo some of the scary tools in the REFINE screen.
People got so used to sliders that a new actually more sensible, set of tools was daunting to some.
Instead if sliding things like a Luminance slider, a contrast, brightness, Clarity, Brightness, Blacks, Fill Light, Recovery, Exposure, Vibrance, Saturation, Temperature, and tint, we have a system that does most of that for you, and still allows you to do some personalizing using reason. (I want to keep that sky) (That's a shot of my kids and I want them to look perfect. The heck with the sky)
I actually have a shot of Terry that has a bright spot, a glare coming from the sun off his forehead.
He and I practiced for a number of hours on the best way to minimize/get rid of it.
That's how WE learned!!
That's how I was hoping others might get the hang of it too. Exercise!
YOU decide what you were trying to go for in that shot... and sensibly click on an area telling Qimage that you want to accentuate this or brighten that.
The exercise was designed to have people who were puzzled by only THREE sliders.... only three, to realize that Mike's developing algorithm already has gamma and contrast curves built into the FILL, for example.
Try different grid squares! See what the reaction is,,, see the differences......
Fred