Colorized #1
Re: Colorized #1
Yes, I think I see the problem. If you make his face less red, and presumably "natural" -- at the half-way point between R and Y on the Hue Clock, it actually takes on an unnatural brown/beige color. Interesting phenomenon...
Re: Colorized #1
Hi
Like ArtI found the skin colour too red. I find your revised one better. But it still looks a little red for my eyes on an iPad. It's interesting as I am sure you have checked the hue clock. I wonder how it would work if the wall was less green
Julie
Like ArtI found the skin colour too red. I find your revised one better. But it still looks a little red for my eyes on an iPad. It's interesting as I am sure you have checked the hue clock. I wonder how it would work if the wall was less green
Julie
-
- Posts: 645
- Joined: Fri Sep 20, 2013 8:26 pm
- Contact:
Re: Colorized #1
Getting close to a final...
Thoughts?
Thoughts?
Seeing is more than meets the eye.
Greg Groess
Curvemeister Instructor
Greg Groess
Curvemeister Instructor
Re: Colorized #1
Looks good!
(Maybe a little more contrast?)
(Maybe a little more contrast?)
Re: Colorized #1
I too measured, in Lab, the skin tone, and find it too red in last image. Too little yellow or too much red/magenta. Close inspection shows blotchy; blur may help blend pixel tones together.
I agree the Bkgd color green can fool our eyes so skin color may be misread via eyes....thus I'd temporarily make Bkgd gray, color correct skin (do it by the numbers as well as your eye), then return Bkgd to less saturated green.
Doug
I agree the Bkgd color green can fool our eyes so skin color may be misread via eyes....thus I'd temporarily make Bkgd gray, color correct skin (do it by the numbers as well as your eye), then return Bkgd to less saturated green.
Doug
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 61 guests