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Posted: Sat Jun 10, 2006 11:45 pm
by -default
Here's a version of Andre's Serious Mimi image.

The image does well in RGB with a shadow in the darker part of the hair, and a neutral placed in the lighter part of the hair. 

After these changes, the hue clock showed a good "lunch hour" skin tone everywhere except the brightest part of the right cheek, which was still too yellow.  To fix this, I moved the bright end of the green channel vertically until the hue clock pointed a good skin tone.

Finally, I used the "floating neutral" feature to modify the overall brightness.

You may paste this text into Curvemeister to get the curve:

RGB 01-09-06_1349 copy 2:
;Red:  (39,0) (97,86) (255,255)
;Green:  (50,0) (138,86) (255,234)
;Blue:  (46,0) (145,86) (255,255)

Red: (0.153,0.000), (0.380,0.337), (1.000,1.000)
Green: (0.196,0.000), (0.541,0.337), (1.000,0.916)
Blue: (0.180,0.000), (0.569,0.337), (1.000,1.000)

Posted: Sun Jun 11, 2006 8:45 pm
by mikemeister_admin
Ì did it also but a simpler way.

I loaded the picture first in P.S.E. 4.0
then a shadow.highlight on 25 %.
then I did the usual way with blackpoint highlight in Curvemeister.
Then I placed a neutral on the eyeball and a pin 1 skin  on the skin.
After that a little bit bumping the colors.

frits


Posted: Sun Jun 11, 2006 10:33 pm
by -default
Nice one, Frits! 

I think your hair color is more accurate, judging from the other photograph.

Posted: Sun Jun 11, 2006 10:39 pm
by mikemeister_admin

Nice one, Frits! 

I think your hair color is more accurate, judging from the other photograph.


That is the reason why I did the picture again.

Frits


Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 7:08 am
by -default


Nice one, Frits! 

I think your hair color is more accurate, judging from the other photograph.

That is the reason why I did the picture again.
Frits


Whatever your reason may be, this is an excellent result!

Posted: Thu Jun 22, 2006 11:53 pm
by mikemeister_admin
Frits, I like the way you did this image. What did you mean by " then a shadow.highlight on 25%".
Thanks Joe S

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2006 2:34 am
by mikemeister_admin

Here's a version of Andre's Serious Mimi image.
Finally, I used the "floating neutral" feature to modify the overall brightness.

You may paste this text into Curvemeister to get the curve:

RGB 01-09-06_1349 copy 2:
;Red:  (39,0) (97,86) (255,255)
;Green:  (50,0) (138,86) (255,234)
;Blue:  (46,0) (145,86) (255,255)



Red: (0.153,0.000), (0.380,0.337), (1.000,1.000)
Green: (0.196,0.000), (0.541,0.337), (1.000,0.916)
Blue: (0.180,0.000), (0.569,0.337), (1.000,1.000)




How do you paste this info in Curvemeister to get the curves?

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2006 6:11 am
by mikemeister_admin

Frits, I like the way you did this image. What did you mean by " then a shadow.highlight on 25%".
Thanks Joe S


Joes,

In Photoshop Elements 4.0 there is a way to do that.
That is a sort of mask you can manipulate.
see the picture.

Frits

Posted: Mon Jun 26, 2006 8:08 pm
by -default



How do you paste this info in Curvemeister to get the curves?


Hi Andre,

Copy the text to the clipboard, and then paste it into curvemeister.

If that does not work, you can manually enter the curve values.

Mike