Please, Johnannes, see my message off-list about this problem. Javier Ruiz The 25/08/09 13:59, Rich Caldwell escribió/wrote:
> I know in the full version of Photoshop you can go to Select>Color > Range, eyedrop colors directly in the image you want to add to the > selection, close the tool, and then delete what's selected. It's > fairly self-explanatory. > > Alternatively, Image>Adjustments>Replace Color will allow you to > select colors the same way, but right from within the tool you can > adjust the color of the selection. So, just select what you want to > delete, and then bump the lightness up to the max. > > However, I have no idea if these features are in Elements, and I'm > guessing you'd still have manual clean-up to do afterward. Of course, > this only works if the pencil marks are of different color than the > music. > > Rich > > On Aug 25, 2009, at 5:19 AM, shirling & neueweise wrote: >> having used the programme extensively recently, something like this >> should be possible i would think, but someone with more experience >> with the programme might know better. i didn't deal with colour at >> all. >> >> you can try to adjust things with the "levels" after converting to >> greyscale (if you haven't already). this way you can set the >> programme to interpret everything below a certain level as white and >> above as black. but the results are not always so pretty... and it >> can make things quite grainy, so probably a big staedtler and a pot >> of coffee is your best solution. viel spaß dabei! >> >>> I was actually hoping to find a toll which could distinguish (by >>> colour I guess) the pencil markings from the print, and simply take >>> them out for me. If that is not possible I will have to clean them >>> before I scan them. > > > _______________________________________________ > Finale mailing list > Finale@shsu.edu > http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list Finale@shsu.edu http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale