Colin wrote:

>In Levels, double click the highlight eyedropper, which brings up the 
>colour picker. Select the colour you want, and then click on the part of 
>the picture you want to be that colour.

Why so it does! Thanks, Colin. :-)

OTOH, that isn't *quite* the effect I was looking for, since it also crabs 
the white point. I used the "Bear" in the PS tutorials, and tried to turn 
the blue shadows into a more blue-green...it turned the whole picture 
blue-green. Possibly I did it wrong, or I misunderstood the premise. It 
seems you need to do a color mask to make this work (it does work in PS-LE, 
BTW).

Best regards--LRA


>From: "Colin Maddock" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: Re: filmscanners: Re: filmscanners: Why not sRGB ?
>Date: Wed, 15 Aug 2001 17:50:10 +1200
>
>Lynn allen asked:
> >Isn't there also a way to select a color in Photoshop, either from the
> >screen or from the palette, and tell it "This is the reference color for
> >*that* area?" I mean, of course, without painting it all in one flat 
>color?
>
>In Levels, double click the highlight eyedropper, which brings up the 
>colour picker. Select the colour you want, and then click on the part of 
>the picture you want to be that colour.
>
>Colin Maddock
>
>
>


_________________________________________________________________
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp

Reply via email to