Yes - I did and it’s called secondaryColour. I much prefer it to the Hue correct as it is very clean, as it’s all done with subtraction, shuffles, and max/mins internally.
Splits the image into RGB, CMY, BNW and you can change each of those to any colour you want. It’s on Nukepedia. Howard Jones Visual Effects Supervisor m: 07973 265624 | e: [email protected] | w: www.axis-vfx.com > On 30 Mar 2017, at 13:27, Martin Constable <[email protected]> wrote: > > Am a matter of interest, why do you want this? > > I am a fan of Selective Color in PS as well. It is the only decent Hue tool > in PS. However… in Nuke we have the great Hue Correct, which, as far as I can > see, does a better job of the same task. > > > Martin Constable > > >> On 30 Mar 2017, at 6:29 PM, motion artist <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> Hello >> >> I was wondering if anyone has tried rebuilding the selective color operator >> in photoshop inside of nuke? Or maybe there are gizmos that are working in >> the same way? A quick google search doesn't seem to give much result in >> terms of the actual technicalities of how that operator works. >> >> Thanks for the help! >> >> Stepan >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Nuke-users mailing list >> [email protected], http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/ >> http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users > > _______________________________________________ > Nuke-users mailing list > [email protected], http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/ > http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users -- *A X I S V F X* The Bottle Yard Studios Whitchurch Lane Bristol BS14 0BH axis-vfx.com
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