I will work on the images.
Thanks for your help.
At first glance, the ‘col match’ appeared like an automated version of your method, which appears to have more ‘manual controls’.
—
xx
"Mike Russell" wrote in message
I don’t know how CS’s color match function works, and it’s certainly worth
a
try in this case. With Curvemeister it would probably be more of a manual process. You’ll get an exact match of the colors you specify manually,
and
you may choose which color space to do the matching. More than likely RGB is the space you want, if that matches your original image, but if you did
a
hue change, you may get a getter result by selecting HSB as your color space.
—
Mike Russell
www.curvemeister.com
www.geigy.2y.net
frankg wrote:
I will try this when I’m not so sleepy – isnt it very very similar to what image"adjust>col match – does if you use the entire image of the source file and apply it to the target?
"Mike Russell" wrote in message
frankg wrote:
Actually it’s the exact same shot (still life), just a slight variation with a prop added. I edited the first frame some time ago and now I’m having some difficulty matching the col on the next frame, it’s subtle – cant remember what I originally did with curves, hue/saturation, col balance. I will just keep pluggin’ away trying to eyeball it. Thought there may be an easy way, and not sure it’s an interesting enough project for you to warrent your offer of a tutorial
If you fiind yourself spinning your wheels, check out the tutorial on curve extraction.
http://www.curvemeister.com/tutorials/CurveExtraction/index. html
The tutorial shows how to generate a curve from two otherwise identical images taken with different color balance settings. I think the process would be identical for your images. Using this procedure, you can create a curve that you can then apply to the image you want to modify. You can use the Curvemeister demo to create and save the curve file, then apply it using photoshop. —
Mike Russell
www.curvemeister.com
www.geigy.2y.net