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FORUMS Post Processing, Marketing & Presenting Photos RAW, Post Processing & Printing 
Thread started 26 Jun 2007 (Tuesday) 21:57
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glare on eyeglasses

 
canon ­ shooter
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Jun 26, 2007 21:57 |  #1

which one have you had the best luck with the Clone or Healing Brush.

I tried Spot Healing and I got kind of spotty results. Seems like I have done this before and workede, but now I can't remember how I did it.

Why size brush should you use on the spot healer? I seem to be getting dark spots


Jim

5D Mark III Grip, 40D Grip, Canon 17-40L, Canon 24-105 F4L IS, Canon 70-200 IS II F2.8L, Canon 100-400L, Canon 50 F1.4, Canon 100 F2.8, Canon 580 EX
It's the Glass that Counts!

  
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Damo77
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Jun 26, 2007 23:26 |  #2

Without seeing your photo, it's hard to suggest anything. But I usually find that it's best to select the glared area (using Quick Mask, or whatever) and use Levels/Curves to correct it as well as possible to match the surrounds, then use clone/heal tools to do the final touches.


Damien
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canon ­ shooter
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Jun 27, 2007 00:01 |  #3

Damo77 wrote in post #3446295 (external link)
Without seeing your photo, it's hard to suggest anything. But I usually find that it's best to select the glared area (using Quick Mask, or whatever) and use Levels/Curves to correct it as well as possible to match the surrounds, then use clone/heal tools to do the final touches.

This is interesting. I am still learning CS3, so can you give me more on how to select the eyeglass area and then how you use levels/curves to fix from there??


Jim

5D Mark III Grip, 40D Grip, Canon 17-40L, Canon 24-105 F4L IS, Canon 70-200 IS II F2.8L, Canon 100-400L, Canon 50 F1.4, Canon 100 F2.8, Canon 580 EX
It's the Glass that Counts!

  
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Damo77
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Jun 27, 2007 00:40 |  #4

Still flying blind here, Jim. Can you post the photo in question?


Damien
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howzitboy
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Jun 27, 2007 03:09 |  #5

just clone skin above the glasses and paste em in.


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glare on eyeglasses
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