Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2007 6:12 am
I am still learning the difference, but I believe this is an underexposed picture of my dog (first attachment).
2nd attachment:
I used the wizard, and selected darks (shadow behind on right) and lights (right under her chin). However, I am wondering if it turned out too light. I picked the RGB version.
3rd attachment:
This time I tried out the option to just click on the picture to set the lights and darks. The only difference I did was select the dark on the alarm clock face in the (messy!) background. The lab version looked the best w/ the saturation of colors I pulled out through moving the bar.
4th attachment:
I used the threshold control for this one. I ended up w/ using the Lab version, however, the RGB was able to make the white fur look more "normal" whereas the Lab made it stark white.
2nd attachment:
I used the wizard, and selected darks (shadow behind on right) and lights (right under her chin). However, I am wondering if it turned out too light. I picked the RGB version.
3rd attachment:
This time I tried out the option to just click on the picture to set the lights and darks. The only difference I did was select the dark on the alarm clock face in the (messy!) background. The lab version looked the best w/ the saturation of colors I pulled out through moving the bar.
4th attachment:
I used the threshold control for this one. I ended up w/ using the Lab version, however, the RGB was able to make the white fur look more "normal" whereas the Lab made it stark white.