Claudio60
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Posts posted by Claudio60
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- Roger C, stokerg, dutchshader and 1 other
- 4
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Hi stokerg,
I just downloaded the file and it seems to me you've done a good job, now I'm going to check which adjustements have been applied.to the image and see if I understand the procedure.
A big "thank you" for your kindness and effort, I appreciated it very much.
So, thanks again and have a nice evening!
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Tks stokerg, when (and if) you're done, can you please explain me the procedure you're going to follow (in order I can learn it)? PS: don't forget that I'm a newby.
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Hi stokerg, I just uploaded 2 files (named gennaio 91) in your Dropbox. Tks
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Hi all, I'm tryng to reconstructing colors on a scanned positive photo that was partially exposed to light (on the left side) during the developing process; inspecting the channels I noticed that the red channel is damaged (nothing visible on the left side) while in the blue and green channels there are some informations; is there a way to copy these existing info and paste them into the red channel so to reconstruct (at least partially) the original color? I know that with Photoshop you can do it because I read a tutorial on a book that I own (Restoration & Retouching) that explain the exactly procedure, but I'm a newby and I can't find the equivalent command/procedure in Affinity Photo. PS: if I apply a black and white adjustement layer the missing part of the photo is visible. Any help/idea would be appreciated. I'm sorry for my bad english
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Tks, I already tried the White balance adjustement layer but its result is weak compared to the "3 pickers" ( I noticed that color casts are easier to correct with the grey or grey and white picker, while using only the white eyedropper I can't reach the right (for me) color correction), I think it could be ok for a correctly exposed photo (from digital cameras), but not for one who's affected with a color cast; I also tried the same tool under Development Persona (no difference) but it's not the same result you can get with Gimp or, at least, it needs much more time and effort to achieve it.
PS: my scanned slides are all in .jpeg format.
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Hi Fixx, and thanks for your answer. First of all I must admit I'm a total newbie in photo editing and I bought Affinity Photo just 2 days ago coming from Gimp. At the moment my only purpose is this: I decided to acquire (scanning) all my old slides and unfortunately the oldest ones have a color cast (on some very strong, even if they were correctly stored) that I want to correct; using Gimp, under Level adjustement, setting white and/or grey point with the picker you often achieve a satisfactory/good result (on slides with just one "color cast's color", for example blue) or a good starting point for the more problematic ones. So I decided to buy AP 1st for its more advanced color correction's tool (CMYK that Gimp doesn't have) and 2nd for the inpainting tool to get rid of dust and imperfections on positive films; in these 2 days I got slightly better results with AP rather than with Gimp (on very problematic slides), but for the other "simple"color cast's correction the procedure in Gimp is faster and easier, 3-4 clicks and you're done (using levels adj. with WGB pickers of course); using AP instead, I need more time to reach the same result ( but maybe I'm doing something wrong or I can't find the right tool inside the program), that's the reason why I asked for the "3 eyedroppers feature".
Tks again and sorry for my bad english -
Channel's color damaged
in Pre-V2 Archive of Affinity on Desktop Questions (macOS and Windows)
Posted
The images aren't correctly ordered, sry