Tutorial Remove Red Eye In Photoopsh

- Open the image. 
- Go to Image > Duplicate and close the original. 
- In Photoshop 6 or earlier, go to View > New View. In Photoshop 7 go to Window > Documents > New Window. This will open a duplicate window of the same image. 
- Zoom one of the windows so that you can see the eyes as large as possible. Set the other window view to 100%. 
- Arrange the two windows so you can see both the zoomed view and the 100% view at the same time. 
- Create a new layer.
- Use the eyedropper to pick up a color from the iris of the eye. It should be a fairly gray tint with a hint of the eye color.
- Paint over the red part of the eye on the new layer, being careful not to paint over the eyelids.
- Go to Filters > Blur > Gaussian and give it about a 1 pixel blur to soften the edges.
- Set the layer blend mode to Saturation. This will take the red out without removing the highlights, but in many cases it leaves the eyes too gray and hollow looking.
- If that's the case, duplicate the saturation layer and change the blend mode to Hue. That should put some color back in while still preserving the highlights. 
- If the color is too strong after adding a Hue layer, lower the opacity of the Hue layer.
- When you're happy with the results you can merge the extra layers down.
 
 
 
          
      
 
 
          
        
          
        
Tutorial Remove Red Eye In Photoopsh

- Open the image. 
- Go to Image > Duplicate and close the original. 
- In Photoshop 6 or earlier, go to View > New View. In Photoshop 7 go to Window > Documents > New Window. This will open a duplicate window of the same image. 
- Zoom one of the windows so that you can see the eyes as large as possible. Set the other window view to 100%. 
- Arrange the two windows so you can see both the zoomed view and the 100% view at the same time. 
- Create a new layer.
- Use the eyedropper to pick up a color from the iris of the eye. It should be a fairly gray tint with a hint of the eye color.
- Paint over the red part of the eye on the new layer, being careful not to paint over the eyelids.
- Go to Filters > Blur > Gaussian and give it about a 1 pixel blur to soften the edges.
- Set the layer blend mode to Saturation. This will take the red out without removing the highlights, but in many cases it leaves the eyes too gray and hollow looking.
- If that's the case, duplicate the saturation layer and change the blend mode to Hue. That should put some color back in while still preserving the highlights. 
- If the color is too strong after adding a Hue layer, lower the opacity of the Hue layer.
- When you're happy with the results you can merge the extra layers down.
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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