Light Spots
fredjclaus
Registered Users Posts: 759 Major grins
I was on a portrait session this afternoon and saw this great piece of drift wood. It was the end of the shoot so I asked the parents to come sit on the log. Everything looked nice, but my lens hood didn't work and I got this light flair. Is there a way in Photoshop to get rid of it?
Fred J Claus
Commercial Photographer
http://www.FredJClaus.com
http://www.Fredjclaus.com/originals
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Commercial Photographer
http://www.FredJClaus.com
http://www.Fredjclaus.com/originals
Save on your own SmugMug account. Just enter Coupon code i2J0HIOcEElwI at checkout
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This may not fully fix the issue, however it will give you a better starting point than the image posted above. If you can then post a sample of the darker image straight out of the raw processor that would help.
Regards,
Stephen Marsh
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/
Commercial Photographer
http://www.FredJClaus.com
http://www.Fredjclaus.com/originals
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Sure there are some things that you can do in say Photoshop, one just has less to work with in terms of the blown detail...
Attached is a very quick edit. Obviously, with higher resolution data one has to take more care, it is hard to see what is really going on with such a low res image.
One could try to burn the sunspot/flare, but that never seems to work well.
What I did was to copy out a section of the darker right hand side of the woman's torso, flipped horizontally and distorted and layer masked it into position over the lighter left hand side. I also did a little bit of colour blend mode clone stamp on the adjoining area of the man's top.
I also put in some blue sky in darken blend mode and made a very rough mask of the folk's heads and faces so that the darken blend did not intrude. One can be very rough and ready and not need a perfect mask when using this approach. I also added just a little extra contrast with a curve and also with a move similar to clarity, to add midtone contrast.
It wil come down to your retouching skills in Photoshop or another pixel editor, however I think that this image is recoverable.
Best,
Stephen Marsh
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~binaryfx/
http://prepression.blogspot.com/