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Help Getting Rid of Dog "Green Eye"

BradfordBennBradfordBenn Registered Users Posts: 2,506 Major grins
edited January 4, 2008 in Finishing School
Howdy All-

So I have been practicing stuff using my Newfoundland as a subject. I am definitely learning stuff. One of the things I have learned is that the red-eye retouching tools does not fix the green eye that occurs with dogs. So I have been going into Photoshop to do the touch up, but I am not always happy with the end result. Sometimes it looks just too drastic.

What I have been doing is exporting out of Lightroom 1.3.1 to Photoshop.
Then in Photoshop CS3 I zoom in on the eyes.
I then pick a portion of the eye color that is not green to use as my "brush" color.
I then use the magic wand or lasso to select the green portion of the eye.
I then brush on the right color, typically varying the amount of opacity to see what looks best.

is there a better way?

Here is a sample of the result...

237970651-M.jpg
-=Bradford

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    ShepsMomShepsMom Registered Users Posts: 4,319 Major grins
    edited December 31, 2007
    Make a new layer
    Select the "green" color of the eye using either lasso or marquee (eliptical)
    Select darker part of the dog real eye color with selection tool
    Use brush to color your selected "green" eye
    Make a new layer
    Use blending option 'Color'
    Diselect.
    Flatten image.

    Hope this helps!
    Marina
    www.intruecolors.com
    Nikon D700 x2/D300
    Nikon 70-200 2.8/50 1.8/85 1.8/14.24 2.8
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    susanbudgesusanbudge Registered Users Posts: 44 Big grins
    edited January 1, 2008
    My method is similar to ShepsMom except I use the overlay blend mode to get a darker colour and I am too lazy to select the green area so I just paint over it carefully :D

    Susan
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    BradfordBennBradfordBenn Registered Users Posts: 2,506 Major grins
    edited January 2, 2008
    Thanks. Printed them out and will try it out.
    -=Bradford

    Pictures | Website | Blog | Twitter | Contact
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    BradfordBennBradfordBenn Registered Users Posts: 2,506 Major grins
    edited January 3, 2008
    Yup, much better clap.gif

    Thanks

    238977164-M.jpg
    -=Bradford

    Pictures | Website | Blog | Twitter | Contact
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    JavaLoverJavaLover Registered Users Posts: 306 Major grins
    edited January 3, 2008
    Ok I tried the suggestions and I'm sure it's me. So I did something else, I took a 'good' eye photo and overlayed the 'bad' eye photo and then erased the bad eye. Not the greatest photos but shows the work.

    Here's before and after.

    Before...


    2165156728_71c59dac1d.jpg?v=0


    After...



    2164340369_67c27620a2.jpg?v=0
    Canon 40D, stock lens and now a Canon 55mm-250mm f/4-5.6 IS.
    tfarley.smugmug.com
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    BradfordBennBradfordBenn Registered Users Posts: 2,506 Major grins
    edited January 4, 2008
    I did not erase the bad eye, I overlaid the good color it helps to keep some coloration/gradeation in the eye color.
    -=Bradford

    Pictures | Website | Blog | Twitter | Contact
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