> 1- Pick the color of a white structure (I choose a ceiling near a > fluorescent light); 2 - Aplly an overlay layer with the inverse of this > color. Try changing the blend mode of the "overlay layer" to color and adjusting the opacity to taste (maybe 50%). Bob > This makes a filter that I can apply to the other slides (as a starting > point) much better than all my other tries. While it cannot correct for the > uneven illumination, results are very agreable and also very plausible. >
- filmscanners: Correction for daylight slides with art... Mário Teixeira
- Re: filmscanners: Correction for daylight slides... Andy Darlow
- filmscanners: too visible scratches Tomasz Zakrzewski
- filmscanners: RE: filmscanners: Correction for d... Rob Geraghty
- Re: filmscanners: Correction for daylight slides... Arthur Entlich
- Re: filmscanners: Correction for daylight sl... Mário Teixeira
- Re: filmscanners: Correction for dayligh... Robert E. Wright
- Re: filmscanners: Correction for day... Mário Teixeira
- Re: filmscanners: Correction for dayligh... Arthur Entlich
- Re: filmscanners: Correction for day... Maris V. Lidaka, Sr.
- Re: filmscanners: Correction fo... Mário Teixeira
- Re: filmscanners: Correction for daylight slides... EdHamrick
- filmscanners: Re: filmscanners: Correction f... Rob Geraghty
- Re: filmscanners: Correction for daylight sl... Mário Teixeira