02-04-2011, 10:07 AM
Here are the answers:
With dark glasses, you are right, put the points where you think the eyes should be.
PP can deal with spots up to a certain size. To get the best result possible, use the touch-up brush very precisely over the spot i.e. using a small brush to exactly cover the spot. You will get worse results if you use a large brush over the general area.
The touchup brush also handles glare quite well. In addition there are some sliders in the skin lighting section that might help too.
We are thinking of renaming that menu option. However calling it "save and return" also caused confusion as people thought it would save their file, which it doesn't. It just saves the changes into Photoshop's memory.
Tony
With dark glasses, you are right, put the points where you think the eyes should be.
PP can deal with spots up to a certain size. To get the best result possible, use the touch-up brush very precisely over the spot i.e. using a small brush to exactly cover the spot. You will get worse results if you use a large brush over the general area.
The touchup brush also handles glare quite well. In addition there are some sliders in the skin lighting section that might help too.
We are thinking of renaming that menu option. However calling it "save and return" also caused confusion as people thought it would save their file, which it doesn't. It just saves the changes into Photoshop's memory.
Tony