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Am I in the right forum? I’m requesting help with restoration of a scanned print using Photoshop CS.
A fragment (about 5%) of the image can be seen at <http://home.att.net/~rrkaiser/RAK_22_Marian_fragment.tif>
The image was scanned from a commercially produced print, about 30 years old.
Look at the water area. You’ll note easy to see "red spots". They are pretty much everywhere in the print. Not so terrible to prevent my using this image BUT… I’d sure be happy if there was a not-too-time consuming way to make them go away. Using the healing brush or the like on them individually IS more time than I want to spend.
(I’ve looked at what’s in Eismann’s "…Restoration & Retouching" and didn’t find it helpful. I have the idea that if the right things were done to the red channel a corrective mask might be generated… That’s as far as I can take the idea…)
Any ideas?
Thank you for your time and help,
Richard Kaiser
A fragment (about 5%) of the image can be seen at <http://home.att.net/~rrkaiser/RAK_22_Marian_fragment.tif>
The image was scanned from a commercially produced print, about 30 years old.
Look at the water area. You’ll note easy to see "red spots". They are pretty much everywhere in the print. Not so terrible to prevent my using this image BUT… I’d sure be happy if there was a not-too-time consuming way to make them go away. Using the healing brush or the like on them individually IS more time than I want to spend.
(I’ve looked at what’s in Eismann’s "…Restoration & Retouching" and didn’t find it helpful. I have the idea that if the right things were done to the red channel a corrective mask might be generated… That’s as far as I can take the idea…)
Any ideas?
Thank you for your time and help,
Richard Kaiser
Master Retouching Hair
Learn how to rescue details, remove flyaways, add volume, and enhance the definition of hair in any photo. We break down every tool and technique in Photoshop to get picture-perfect hair, every time.