photov wrote:
Thank you Bob! I appreciate and highly regard your comments. I have been trying to control my catchlights and keep them to one per eye, but as I arrange my lights to keep them diffuse and properly fill I always get back to two. I may try to fix them up in photoshop...new challenges and learning opportunities.
Doing it in Photoshop is the only way that I know of to correct it. Here's my fix, which was only about 30 seconds to do in PSCS2 using the clone stamp - and that's the only edit that I made. Ultimately, you are the one to be satisfied - if you prefer the larger, multiple catchlights, then stick with that - OK?
I barely tweaked the exposure in the RAW format on some of the photos. I'm not sure what I did that you're seeing. My eye is still very untrained; hopefully it is not glaring. I only have PSE4 so I have to convert to bw by using hue/saturation layers. I then adjust the brightness/contrast to get it where I want it. It's probably more likely I did something in there that caused what you are seeing.
I wouldn't worry about it - probably just my imagination. However, the Brightness/Contrast control is at the bottom of the my list for favorite tools. I much prefer to do everything needed in Levels, and if necessary Curves or Shadows/Highlights. Most authors of Photoshop books seem to think that the Contrast/Brightness tool (in any image program) is the least recommended tool. Most important though for RAW shooters is to keep the image in 16 bit mode in a non-lossy format (avoid jpg) such as PSD or TIF until the final save for the end purpose - then and only then go to 8 bits and jpg format.
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