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I hope I can make this question clear.
I have a situation that happens off and on where I have an image that’s unevenly lit. Unfortunately it’s not a simple gradient. Instead the uneven light is splotchy. It may help to think of it as irregular eccentric vignetting combined with a gradient.
Throughout the image I have a consistent background with patterns overlaid on it. Imagine the uniform wall of a building with posters, graffiti and advertising on it.
So, I have a consistent reference throughout the image. It seems like I should be able to use this reference to automatically adjust for the lighting irregularities, but I don’t know how.
I imagine something like marking 50 points on the "wall" throughout the image, then telling Photoshop, "Make them all the same density and, by interpolation, apply the correction to the area between points." This is a hypothetical command to illustrate what I want to do.
Anybody know how to do this?
What I do now is use dodge and burn to try to even things up, but this is crude and doesn’t do a very good job.
I have a situation that happens off and on where I have an image that’s unevenly lit. Unfortunately it’s not a simple gradient. Instead the uneven light is splotchy. It may help to think of it as irregular eccentric vignetting combined with a gradient.
Throughout the image I have a consistent background with patterns overlaid on it. Imagine the uniform wall of a building with posters, graffiti and advertising on it.
So, I have a consistent reference throughout the image. It seems like I should be able to use this reference to automatically adjust for the lighting irregularities, but I don’t know how.
I imagine something like marking 50 points on the "wall" throughout the image, then telling Photoshop, "Make them all the same density and, by interpolation, apply the correction to the area between points." This is a hypothetical command to illustrate what I want to do.
Anybody know how to do this?
What I do now is use dodge and burn to try to even things up, but this is crude and doesn’t do a very good job.
MacBook Pro 16” Mockups 🔥
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