Forum Moderators: wheatpenny Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon
Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Feb 03 6:38 am)
Try this...maybe... -Open the original in photoshop. -Convert it to LAB color. -In the channels...use a gaussian? blur of about 6-10 on both the A and B channels. -On the Luminosity channel, use noise>despeckle. -then convert it back to RGB. -then do your adjustments. -then a bit of "smart sharpening". -THEN scale your image down to viewing size. see if that does any good. BTW....I'm making a set of Photoshop actions....
nplus - Thank you. That's a technique I've used for color scans (especially to get "blue pixel" noise out of low light shots), but don't think it works in this case. The A & B channels are blank (actually, they'd be a single medium grey color). If I remember correctly, A channel is green/red and B is blue/yellow; don't think they correlate in b&w. -=>Donald
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