Site pages
Current course
Participants
General
September 26 - October 2
October 3 - October 9
October 17 - October 23
October 24 - October 30
October 31 - November 6
November 7 - November 13
November 14 - November 20
November 21 - November 27
November 28 - December 4
December 5 - December 11
December 12 - December 18
December 19 - December 25
January 2 - January 8
January 9 - January 15
January 30 - February 5
February 6 - February 12
February 13 - February 19
February 20 - February 26
February 27 - March 4
March 5 - March 11
March 12 - March 18
March 19 - March 25
March 26 - April 1
April 9 - April 15
April 16 - April 22
April 23 - April 29
April 30 - May 6
May 7 - May 13
May 14 - May 20
May 21 - May 27
May 28 - June 3
June 4 - June 10
June 11 - June 17
June 18 - June 24
Red-Eye Removal Tutorial
Follow this tutorial link supplied here to remove red-eye from photos in Photoshop (or read the following directions).
Here's How:
1. Open the image.
2. Go to Image > Duplicate and close the original.
3. In Photoshop 7 or newer, go to Window > Documents > New Window. This will open a duplicate window of the same image.
4. 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.
5. Create a new layer.
6. 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.
7. Paint over the red part of the eye on the new layer, being careful not to paint over the eyelids.
8. Go to Filters > Blur > Gaussian and give it about a 1 pixel blur to soften the edges.
9. 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.
10. When you're happy with the results you can merge the extra layers down.
Tips:
1. If you need to darken the pupil area, use the burn tool. It should only take a couple of taps with the burn tool to darken the pupils.
2. Before merging your layers, use the eraser tool to clean up any overspray from painting outsideof the iris.
This technique works in Photoshop 4 and up, including Photoshop LE and Photoshop Elements.
Here's How:
1. Open the image.
2. Go to Image > Duplicate and close the original.
3. In Photoshop 7 or newer, go to Window > Documents > New Window. This will open a duplicate window of the same image.
4. 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.
5. Create a new layer.
6. 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.
7. Paint over the red part of the eye on the new layer, being careful not to paint over the eyelids.
8. Go to Filters > Blur > Gaussian and give it about a 1 pixel blur to soften the edges.
9. 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.
10. When you're happy with the results you can merge the extra layers down.
Tips:
1. If you need to darken the pupil area, use the burn tool. It should only take a couple of taps with the burn tool to darken the pupils.
2. Before merging your layers, use the eraser tool to clean up any overspray from painting outsideof the iris.
This technique works in Photoshop 4 and up, including Photoshop LE and Photoshop Elements.
Click http://graphicssoft.about.com/library/nosearch/n-psredeye.htm link to open resource.