Thanks Art and all the others that helped. In fact, trying to correct with
levels in PS was beeing truely difficult -- I don't remember very well the
true color, reproductions in books that I have doesn't seem very "true" and
I was not liking the results. Happily, I ended remembering that I read
something about correction with inverse colors. After many trials I got an
approach that seems to work. I post it in the hope that it can help others:
1- Pick the color of a white structure (I choose a ceiling near a
fluorescent light); 2 - Aplly an overlay layer with the inverse of this
color.
This makes a filter that I can apply to the other slides (as a starting
point) much better than all my other tries. While it cannot correct for the
uneven illumination, results are very agreable and also very plausible.
Mario Teixeira
mjteixeira@yahoo.com
On December 03, 2001 3:57 AM, "Arthur Entlich" <artistic@ampsc.com> wrote:
| If the color is greenish from fluorescent lighting, tray adding magenta
| until the green hue is gone, if that isn't totally successful, you may
| need to add some yellow or red to counteract the blue/cyan lighting.
|
| Art
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