Crosswords4 mins ago
Wrong Colour
14 Answers
How can you isolate a face in a photo group with the intention of changing the tone/colour without showing a line all round the face?Thanks!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by codswallop. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.many programs now have facial recognition and an auto improvement facility, other wise you use the magic wand selector to select the face you want to alter then copy/paste it onto a new layer. do whatever editing you want and it wont affect the rest of the image. If you go and look on youtube, there are loads of tutorials.
What you want to do is very basic and a few minuts at most to do but you still need an understanding of the software to get he best results
Layers masks and feathering.
Adjustment layers and soft brush
Combinations of the above
you could just select the face and then use any of the adjustment tools eg hue and saturation, levels, contrast, replace colour, selective colour, channels etc etc
theres usually a ton of ways to do anything in photoshop and most other photosoftware
you need at least a basic grasp of layer, masks and selection tools
youtube has a gazillion vids on how to do all this kind of thing inPshop, Pshop elements, GIMP, Net.paint etc etc, they all work roughly the same
Layers masks and feathering.
Adjustment layers and soft brush
Combinations of the above
you could just select the face and then use any of the adjustment tools eg hue and saturation, levels, contrast, replace colour, selective colour, channels etc etc
theres usually a ton of ways to do anything in photoshop and most other photosoftware
you need at least a basic grasp of layer, masks and selection tools
youtube has a gazillion vids on how to do all this kind of thing inPshop, Pshop elements, GIMP, Net.paint etc etc, they all work roughly the same
In Photoshop, simply use the lasso tool to outline the face. Then (the important bit!) right-click and select 'Feathering'. Choose a suitable value (perhaps 10 pixels, but it will depend upon the size of the image). Then apply the required changes to the selected area before right-clicking again and deselecting it.
Not got Photoshop? Try GIMP:
http:// www.gim p.org/
Not got Photoshop? Try GIMP:
http://
I use Photoshop 6.0 (which is an old, but 'full', version of the program). You can still do the same thing in PSE but the instructions are slightly different:
http:// www.pho toshope ssentia ls.com/ basics/ selecti ons/fea ther-qu ick-mas k/
http://