eobet Posted July 9, 2022 Share Posted July 9, 2022 Here's an example: Those leaves should have a green, transparent color and not black. Shouldn't Affinity use it's "inpainting" (horrible name, btw 🙈) algorithm to try to find the proper colors? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Old Bruce Posted July 9, 2022 Share Posted July 9, 2022 That would be nice but it would involve an awful lot of work to teach the Inpainting to ignore yet preserve the white(blue) of the sky. And be honest, will you notice when you are viewing at 100% instead of being zoomed in so close that the pixels are so easily visible? Quote Mac Pro (Late 2013) Mac OS 12.7.4 Affinity Designer 2.4.1 | Affinity Photo 2.4.1 | Affinity Publisher 2.4.1 | Beta versions as they appear. I have never mastered color management, period, so I cannot help with that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NotMyFault Posted July 9, 2022 Share Posted July 9, 2022 7 hours ago, eobet said: Those leaves should have a green, transparent color and not black. This assumes that the false pinkish color is showing leaves. Often, it is only a optical artifact, not a real object. Quote Mac mini M1 A2348 | Windows 10 - AMD Ryzen 9 5900x - 32 GB RAM - Nvidia GTX 1080 LG34WK950U-W, calibrated to DCI-P3 with LG Calibration Studio / Spider 5 iPad Air Gen 5 (2022) A2589 Special interest into procedural texture filter, edit alpha channel, RGB/16 and RGB/32 color formats, stacking, finding root causes for misbehaving files, finding creative solutions for unsolvable tasks, finding bugs in Apps.  Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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