09-05-2007, 03:44 PM
Hi Tony,
Thank you - this worked and got rid of the 'cateracts'. In order to get the eyes light enough however I found that I needed to lower the contrast and up the exposure a little. This kind of washed out the rest of the image. I ended up doing two versions of the image - good eyes and good everything else and then putting them together in Photoshop. Is there an easier way in Portrait P?
j.
Hi Jody,
The problem there is that the default settings for eye whitening don't quite work for that picture. The eye whitening controls can be found in the "Eye" section. There are controls to tell the software how large an area to whiten. Larger areas cover more of the white of the eye, but if it is too large then they will start to cover the dark bits too. To fix it, show the Eye controls then lower the "Eye Area" slider, until the iris is revealed.
Tony
Thank you - this worked and got rid of the 'cateracts'. In order to get the eyes light enough however I found that I needed to lower the contrast and up the exposure a little. This kind of washed out the rest of the image. I ended up doing two versions of the image - good eyes and good everything else and then putting them together in Photoshop. Is there an easier way in Portrait P?
j.
Hi Jody,
The problem there is that the default settings for eye whitening don't quite work for that picture. The eye whitening controls can be found in the "Eye" section. There are controls to tell the software how large an area to whiten. Larger areas cover more of the white of the eye, but if it is too large then they will start to cover the dark bits too. To fix it, show the Eye controls then lower the "Eye Area" slider, until the iris is revealed.
Tony