I have a photo that was taken outside. It has some glare from the sun. Is there any way to remove the lines. It is the only photo that we took standing like that outside, and my roommate and his newlywed wife probably would like this picture. I have it posted online, if you need to look at it or download it (I havnt had a chance to resize it or anything, so it is pretty big at the moment)
I have an interior shot of a living room. There is a framed paiting on the wall which has a reflection from the window on the opposing wall. I'm not sure how to remove the reflection while keeping the integrity of the photo. Another possible fix could be doing a mirror image of the photo itself to "cover" the glare spot on the other half of the painting. I have much to learn when it comes to photoshop.
I have an old photo that my uncle wanted that could not be taken out of the frame. As a result it has this glare on it that I cannot figure out how to remove. Can anyone tell me how to?
These shots that i have here, i should ve used a polarizing filter so there wouldnt be so much glare. What can i do in Photoshop CS to get rid of the glare, soften the ocean, and overall improve the photos.
I ended up having a picture take with a point and shoot camera. What would be the best way to remove or at least look presentable to remove the glare from the glasses from one side? It is bad but I want this picture to be as good as I can get it.
Is there a good way to either tone down or remove the reflective glare that frequently shows up in a photo subject's eyeglasses? I have a number of otherwise nice photos, but the viewer will always see these glare spots first.
I have been playing around with the clone stamp, but I can't get a look I like. We are trying to have this photo printed to be framed (just 3x5) so does not have to be perfect, but I would like to get the flash reflection out of here....
I have attached some pictures, you can notice the flash spots due to reflection on silver color. What's the best way to remove these spots and improve the photo quality. (I understand the best way is to shoot the photos in a specific environment to disallow this effect, but I am asking if there is away to edit it using Light room and remove the flash effect).
I have attached some pictures, you can notice the flash spots due to reflection on silver color. What's the best way to remove these spots and improve the photo quality. (I understand the best way is to shoot the photos in a specific environment to disallow this effect, but I am asking if there is away to edit it using Lightroom and remove the flash effect).
a friend of mine took a picture of me with my favourit hockey player...she used the flash on my camera...i really wanna keep it...but there is a glare on my glasses and i need to remove it...i've attached the picture...
I'm completing an ad for a bakery and the image of a cupcake that I'm trying to use wasn't done in a whitebox, hence alot of glare on the lefthand part of the image. It's washed out the pink frosting into an almost white color and the strawberries are not saturated in color. Is there something I can do to get rid of the white spot and make the image look as if it was shot professionally in a white box?
(in the image, it's the front most chocolate cupcake)
I saw a tutorial recently that describes how to use Photoshop to composite layers and simulate multiple lights. I tried it out in GIMP, figuring the result would be similar, but the image doesn't looks the same in GIMP as it does in the render.
Here's the link: [URL]
I posted as R. Moore, and the creator of the tutorial responded, as you'll see on the page. But I'm afraid I don't quite understand his response and I don't want to badger him with questions like this.
So here's what I do. I'm using Poser and I have three lights: a key light, fill light, and back light. I turn on only the key light, render with that. Then I turn on only the fill light, render with that, then I turn on only the back light and render with that. Then I put them in GIMP using "Open as Layers" and put a layer of black beneath those. Then I turn all three light layers to Screen mode, as the guy suggests, and play with the opacity. But the colors are wrong. Reds too red, blues aren't blue enough...
I get the impression that, done correctly, you can arrange the layers in such a way that they look identical to the actual render, just so long as the layers are in the proper mode. Am I right or wrong about this, and what can I do about it? I would be glad to attach files if necessary.
I recently downloaded gimp and am in the process of getting used to it.
I have discovered something that is a bit of annoyance to me. when adding text to an image, I get the following dialog box over where I want to put the text.
I have set it to use editor under the text tool, but it doesn't remove the on-screen floating dialog box, also selecting use editor doesn't seem to stick, and it reverts back to being unticked upon restarting the program.
is it possible to remove this dialog box, as well as make the use editor method the default?
I have a drawing that is 720X596 px and I have used the rectangular tool and select - invert, cut out a 222X444 px part that I need to save as a jpeg. However, I can not figure out how to either : delete the 720X596 drawing to leave the 222X444 drawing: or, select the 222X444 drawing to save it.
When i brought up my brushes dock, among the brushes was a little design I had cut out! How it got there but it is definitely not a brush. The drop-down menu for the dock had "delete" but it wasn't active/useable. How to get rid of that non-brush?
it is possible to remove a reflection (that is basically a duplicate of an already existing image, if the angle is good) from a photo. I have a feeling it might be possible, and involves layers and cloning, however I do not know how to get this done. Almost like a reverse-cloning tool. Sample picture provided.
Obviously a lot of factors are involved like glare and angle, but say you could see through the glass, and the reflection angle is a perfect 45 degrees or almost a exact duplicate of existing image, just flipped, is it possible to remove the reflection image and obtain more of the other side of the glass?
I jsut got gimp, and I am using it to make wallpapers for myself and my family. I have a few pictures of my favorite baseball player and I would like to make myself a wall with them, but they all have a watermark on them. I would generally try and find pics without the watermark, but I can't find anything because he is not a big name. How to remove the watermark from the images.
remove couple annoying white edges around the transparent PNG.
[URL]
Solution :Here is what I did in GIMP (how to do it in PS):
Open the image Add another layer underneath the first. - sample the green and paint the new layer with it Select the original and do "Alpha to Selection" "Merge Visible Layers" Add Layer Mask -> Selection Apply Layer Mask Save as PNG
- Important: In GIMP there is a checkbox option to save transparent colors. Make sure it is checked!Reimport into the SketchUp material and it should work (did for me).I want to remove all white edges , i'm okay with black edges.