10-05-2015, 05:43 PM
Hello,
I am getting undesirable results from the Skin Coloring Controls feature in PortraitPro Studio 15.
No matter which settings I try, the resulting skin colors look unnatural and unappealing. Please see the examples in the illustration that I have pasted below. In all of these examples, for demonstration clarity I set the intensity of the Sking Coloring feature at 50%, whereas in normal use I would keep it below around 20%
To my eye, in these examples and on every image that I have applied PP15 to so far, 'Color Correct' and all other Skin Color settings introduce undesirable color tinges, including a little or a lot of olive green. This is forcing me to keep the Skin Color feature turned off.
My source files are in ARGB colour space. I have PortraitPro set to use ARGB as its working color space.
In previous versions of Portrait Pro, I routinely used the Skin Coloring Controls feature to successfully even out skin colour variations. I hope that you can help me to find a way to get similar results from PP15, or else I will need to revert to version 12.
Thanks,
David A. Gilmour
Lumacraft Photography
I am getting undesirable results from the Skin Coloring Controls feature in PortraitPro Studio 15.
No matter which settings I try, the resulting skin colors look unnatural and unappealing. Please see the examples in the illustration that I have pasted below. In all of these examples, for demonstration clarity I set the intensity of the Sking Coloring feature at 50%, whereas in normal use I would keep it below around 20%
To my eye, in these examples and on every image that I have applied PP15 to so far, 'Color Correct' and all other Skin Color settings introduce undesirable color tinges, including a little or a lot of olive green. This is forcing me to keep the Skin Color feature turned off.
My source files are in ARGB colour space. I have PortraitPro set to use ARGB as its working color space.
In previous versions of Portrait Pro, I routinely used the Skin Coloring Controls feature to successfully even out skin colour variations. I hope that you can help me to find a way to get similar results from PP15, or else I will need to revert to version 12.
Thanks,
David A. Gilmour
Lumacraft Photography