Hi Tom, Bob ... There are many ways to achieve a specific result in Photoshop, rarely a "best way" - that's one of the things that makes it, to me at least, such a neat program.
BTW, I asked about the color cast not only here, but on the Photoshop mailing list and on theAdobe Photoshop User-to-User forum, where a lot of PS experts hang out. I was somewhat surprised at the wide range of responses, from several people saying the image had no color cast whatsoever to those who noted a blue, green or even yellow cast. More interesting were the number of ways to eliminate the cast that others said didn't exist. I'm sure there will be more comments waiting for me when I check my mail further ;-)) Shel > [Original Message] > From: Tom C > My point is that traditionally a filtering mechanism is used either at image > capture time or at print time to provide color correction for the rendered > image. By suggesting a warming filter in Photoshop be used, I was merely > suggesting that an analog of the traditional approach be used. > > I don't know the best way to something all the time, but I may know a way > that works. :-) -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List PDML@pdml.net http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net