I could deal with
the blue of the fringe but not the darkness of the fringe:
(Using Corel PhotoPaint) I changed to LAB mode,
then adjusted the tone curve of channel B (the blue-yellow continuum
channel): I raised the middle of the curve from 0-0 coordinates to about
0-+2 or 3 on a scale of 0 to 60 each direction so that's about
2-3%.
To eliminate extra yellow in the cheeks I then
decreased the upper (right) hald of the new curve by about the same amount,
bringing the curve there back to about +30-+30.
The result is attached.
Maris
----- Original Message -----
From: "Rob Geraghty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2001 7:57 AM
Subject: filmscanners: Blue noise - suggestions for
removal?
| it down to 6K to minimise the uuencoded text.
| The attached photo is the result of a really icky combination of film and
| light. The film is Kodak 320T tungsten balanced slide film, and I've taken
| the photo by flash - which is of course daylight balanced... The result is
| the ugly blue shadows. I've managed to remove most of the colour imbalance
| from the original slide, but does anyone have any suggestions for removing
| the blue fringing?
|
| Scanned on a Nikon LS30 using Vuescan 7.0.10 with a 4X multipass.
|
| Yes I know it's grainy but on this occasion I'm not worried about the grain.
| :) It's 320 speed slide film after all.
|
| Rob
|
|