Photoshop :: Cross-Polarization In PS? Scanning Canvas And Getting Too Much Glare?
Jul 22, 2005
Well I am scanning nice oils on canvas and getting too much glare from the scanner light. I've been looking around and found that only way to get around it is to take a photograph of the piece with cross-polorization but I dont have the equip for this, can I get the same results in photoshop or the scanner?
I would like to represent light pulses with circular polarization. I need to reproduce something like in the attachment figure, but I don't know which deformation I should apply and to which polygon (cylinder, helix..).
I am trying to annotate a floor plan to show the location/orientation of section, elevation and detail drawings. The labels must also indicate the appropriate drawing cross reference. (basically a circle with a arrow, text inside circle showing drawing cross reference). My question is - is there an automated way/library to insert such labels or do I have to create each of them from individual elements and make a block?
I'm working on a flyer on a 8x11 canvas, but I want all of the elements I'm working to be transferred to a NTSC video film format. I understand how to a open a NTSC (Video Film Canvas), but I do not understand how to convert a canvas that I'm working to that.
I just got CS5.1 at my job. This must be a preference, but when I adjust the Canvas size, it will constrain the image, rather than cropping the canvas. The Anchor in the Canvas Size menu appears outlined (highlighted?) which indicates that this is something in preferences that I can adjust.
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 used PS to edit my car photos for a while now, but there is one thing I still haven't mastered.
In the photo below I would like to remove the sun glare 'spots' you can see on the rear wheel arch (plus a few smaller ones also), but when I try to colour that area it never blends nicely with the rest of the paintwork.
trying to reduce the amount of glare in this picture of my car. The picture will be used in a calendar so I need it to look professional. I tried getting rid of the glare spots by using the healing brush, smudge, and blur tools, but I'm clueless when it comes to the white spots. I tried using a black fill with opacity set to 8, and that helped a little bit. I'm attaching the original and the modified versions, but if anyone wants the high res version to edit it,
trying to take good pictures with a crappy camera, but was wondering if there was any good way to fix these glare issues. i know you can't simply take a glare out,
Is there anyway to remove the glare from someones glasses? I had never taken pictures of someone before with glasses and there is a lot of glare on his glasses.
I made some pictures of PVC strips for my website and have light glare from the windows in the rolls. Is it possible to take the light glare out to make the products look better?
I have seen some similar topics on the forum, but they all seem to relate to the removal of a flash reflection, or correcting contrast from photos taken in direct sun.
This is a particularly bad photo which I need to improve and I'm honestly not sure if it's just a lost cause.
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.
Back in the early 80's I had an exhibition of my paintings and took photos from an Olympus OM-10. Each painting had a spotlight mounted above it and as you can see from the attached picture, the light glare is strong at the top of the painting (washing out the color and details) and the glare extends about halfway down the photo. I have Photoshop CS3 Extended. how to eliminate the glare from the top half of the painting?
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?
way to take away sun glare from teeth or faces to make it match the rest of a face, or to tone down overexposure on skin in a flash photo, so the skin doesnt look too red or white?
I would like to know the process for eliminating the glare from a mirror, in a photo, as a result of the flash from the camera. I am using Adobe Photoshop CS3 Version 10.0.1 and Windows XP.
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 working on editing photos for a client that took them with very poor quality. DPI low. Pixal Problems. Anyways. I've tried to remove eyeglass glare with no real success. Also if anyone has tutorial knowledge for removing eye glasses that would be great. I've searched threads for glass glare with no success.