Photoshop :: Redish Tint That Happens Only In PS CS2/3
Sep 17, 2007
I have recently installed CS3 and it seems every picture i throw in there will get a reddish tint to the skin of the person in the photo. Makes everyone look like they have a sunburn. I'm not sure if its some filter that is being applied or what. In the windows preview for this images I do not have this problem. Paint and Adobe Bridge CS3 also do not have this issue.
For some reason my CS3 does not show perfect greys. Even when I convert to grey scale the picture looks a little redish. It also prints like that. Whats going on? Because this has not happened until recently.
how to make watermark images that goes at the bottom right corner of Special Folders such as "My Images", or "My Music". They talk about image tinting :
"The large watermark in the bottom right of the folder is 150x150 pixels. It's designed to be anchored to the bottom of the page. Tint the image blue (R71G94B148) and screen back to about 12% opacity with an alpha channel."
I don't know how to perform this blue tinting on my image in Photoshop.
i dont believe its been like this the whole time i've had photoshop. but anyways. ANYTHING in photoshop has a bit of a pink tint to it. tho i can save whatever im working on, look at it with another app. and it will be fine. i have an example here.
right is the saved file. looks normal. left is the file viewed in photoshop, and has a pink tint to it.
I'm a Photoshop CS4 convert and until recently have been printing beautiful photos using my Canon Pixma MP800. Recently I got a new computer, a HP Z400 Workstation. Runs perfectly, except now I find that my photos are printing out with this disguting magenta tint. I've recalibrated the screen and made sure the proper printer drivers were selected, uuninstalled and reinstalled the printer drivers from Canon's website, unset and reset my printer as the default printer, checked all my print settings and color settings in Photoshop, made sure I had the correct paper settings selected and tried both Printer manages color and Photoshop manages color, all to no avail.I've spoken to Canon Tech Support and verified that the printer is printing correctly. I've printed out pictures that I've downloaded from the internet and that are in my Sample Photos folder in My documents and the color is perfect. But as soon as I go to print anything that has been through Photoshop, the magenta returns.
The version they have is 5.5, every picture I load has a pink and black tint to it. The pictures will load fine in the windows explorer browser. I looked in the manual but had to idea where to start.
why my pictures won't appear correctly on the screen after loading them.
I went to Image -> Mode -> RGB but it didn't change. I am opening .jpg files.
I try to change my color settings but no luck. I changed my RGB settings to my monitor's default, and that corrected them, but my grayscale images have a redish tint to them. where I can download a new color management file?
I have taken several photos with an infared camera but for some reason when i have opened the photos they all seem to be very 'red'. These photos are important so i just wanted to see if anyone could offer me some advise on how to filter out the redness in photoshop to get the picture back to its original state.
I did a screen calibration earlier today.  And it went great and everything is perfect. After the calibration I decided to work in Photoshop for some retouching. Everything was great. I closed out and then restarted the program a little later, but now the photos are coming up with a green tint. But if I preview them in the Microsoft image viewer or paint or anything else they look fine.Â
I'm trying to change the color scheme on a model/figure I photographed, but I don't know how. I've done a search in the help field, but it pulls up a ton of unrelated articles.Example of what I'd like to do: I have a photo of a model jet that is red, black, and white. I want to change the red to blue without changing the overall look of the color. I'm not sure how to articulate this, but I want to maintain the hue, saturation and variation in the color. If I select and delete the red, then fill the area using the paint bucket the new color is flat and uninspiring.
Recently I noticed that when I print on a certain paper (Epson Premium Ultra Luster Photo Paper) that a blue tint is being printed on the paper along with the image. This seems to be occurring whether I use a standard .icc file or a customized .icc file for this paper. Am using Adobe CS5 to manage colors, rendering intent relative colorometric. Am using an iMac with 10.6.8. and Epson 3880 printer. The only thing I can think that changed is I upgraded from 10.5 to 10.6 a few months back. If you look along the sides of the image below you can see what I'm getting.
Just for the heck of it, I just printed the same image with Photoshop Elements 9, and I am not getting this blue cast.
I just bought a MacBook Pro three weeks ago. I'm running Mountain Lion. Also, I have my copy of Adobe Photoshop CS6. Â Something very unusual is happening. I'm a Graphic Designer and currently doing an Interior Design major. I calibrated my monitor perfectly. But now, ever since I installed CS6, every time I open Photoshop, a bluish tint sets on the screen, affecting every program running (browsers, for example) and it's very annoying (not to mention it disrupts any color calibration I made to my monitor). The only solution to this problem is closing Photoshop (the problem persists even if I minimize Photoshop to use another program). Â I tried opening Illustrator and it works fine. Only with Photoshop this is happening. Â I searched on Apple discussion boards for similar cases and found nothing. Â What's interesting, I took screenshots to send them to a friend and the screenshots don't seem to be affected by this phenomenon.
I would like to create like a blue filter to cover my picture to make them "blueish". so for example, a picture in black&white will become somehow a little more blue. if i have a picture representing a garden, everything should turn to blue tints.
I shot a photo yesterday which has a reddish tint to it. This “warm glow” is very important to the image and I put a lot of work into getting it right. The image was shot as a DNG and manipulate in Photoshop, I saved it as a .psd for further manipulation or correction.
Now that I got it right I lowered the bits from 16 to 8 and saved the .psd as a .jpg and it looks great in photoshop, can’t see the difference on my humble monitor. But when I open the same jpg file in another viewer like irfanview, that warm reddish glow is gone and there is slightly green cast over the picture which is totally wrong.
I tried it including the ICC and without, with save for web and save as jpg, always the same greenish tint which I don't see in photoshop.
How do I get a jpg with the same colors? I want to offer it as a print on redbubble.com, so I need a high quality JPEG with the right colors.
Since I've upgraded to CS3, I've had this problem. Every document I design in Photoshop will look perfect but will add a blue tint to the canvas when converted into a PDF. It will do this whether the file is a PSD or JPG. It doesn't matter if it's text only or text and a photo. It only puts the blue tint on the actual PS canvas area, so if the canvas size is 5x7 and the document size I choose for the PDF is 8.5x11 then the blue tint is only on the 5x7, not the outer edges of the PDF - it is white.
I've seen color gradations in the tint sliders (which makes selecting exactly what color hue you're shooting for easier). Is this a feature only in CS3 and above (just like the histogram display in the curves palette)?
Title about says it... last night I noticed that images in CS, especially ones with blues, have a pronounced purple tint.
I've Googled the subject pretty exhaustively and came up with nothing except setting the color settings back to the default (which they were at), making sure the color profile is RGB (it is), and taking Adobe Gamma out of my startup group (I did).
Blues show up fine in ImageReady, just look purple in PS. Very weird.
I am still baffled with matching the color - tint .
If I copy paste something on another image . I get crude red -green-blue + - world adjustments . I sample the color numbers to match still no luck . The saturation / Hue adjustments are semi helpful .
I end up with a flat gray bluish skin tone , Is their a color temp lighting corrector , talking from my kodak paper-photo printing 70s flashback years.
click path to fine tint / color correction for skin tones?
I began tweaking things up with proof setup, and when the "preserve RGB numbers" box is unchecked, the bluish tint is gone, but still the canvas was different from the original image because it appears to be slightly desaturated compared to the original image. The original image appears normally everywhere else, and that includes the photo viewer, the browser, the library, and such.
It even appears normally in smaller previews on the menu by the side and in the Adjustments>Variations box. The only difference is the canvas, and when I looked up the problem, it either had no response, or it mentioned monitor calibrating, and I've already tried that so I already know the monitor is not the issue! I even tried deleting the preferences file and relaunching Photoshop. The problem still persists. I have looked everywhere online, and I cannot afford clinking more urls. Â The text was only enlarged for those who have a hard time reading small text, or those who do not even pay much attention, for that matter. [[ and reverted by an admin who actually wanted to try and read what you wrote ]]
The original image.The photoshop window with troll canvas in the middle.The Adjustments>Variations window. Notice everything still is fine over here.Another proof setup option. Again, the canvas's trolling persists. Every setup option was either this or that dark blue tint.
I am using pse10 with an epson workforce 60 printer and everything prints out with a green tinge through it. Also the print is nothing like what is on my screen. I am using a Visi-sub icc profile for sublimation printing.
I can no longer 'apply a tint (one of the effects is the editor) to a photo.When I select one and click APPLY, I get a popup window that says: Â Plus members get online services, artwork and movie themes....Please sign in to upgrade to Plus. Â Well, I use to be able to use this feature and never got that window before. Â DO I NOW HAVE TO PURCHASE A PLUS application to supplement my PSE8? Â Also, when I try to sign in with the same Adobe ID that I use to get into this forum, I get another popup window that says: Â Photoshop.com services are currently unavailable. Please try again later or check your network connection. Error 400. Â I thought my password might be wrong, so I also used the 1st popup window to request that it be sent to me... and I got a message that says:An email has been sent to you .... but I never get the email.
I've got hold of some Welding glass to use as an ND filter on my Fuji HS20. It arrived today and works a treat. I do however now have a new issue that this has caused. I've set a custom white balance on the camera to counter act the tint from the glass. This now produces the correct colour on my jpg photo's however the RAW files have the wrong colour tint. When I open them in photoshop elements 11 I get the CAMERA RAW application. The white balance is set to 'AS SHOT' however the Tint is at +150. I'm guessing my problem is that the tint needs to be more than +150 and CAMERA RAW is limiting it. Does this mean I am now limited to using JPG's when I use this glass as an ND filter, or is there a way I can get rid of this limit to the tint on the white balance
in PS, I can use the gradation curves with a pipette tool, looking for black, white and grey areas and remove tints from old photos and slides that I have scanned. In LR, I also have gradation curves, but the very useful pipette tool seems to be missing. Is there a way to enhance the photos as easily as in PS?
In CorelDRAW X5 I sometimes need to convert a PMS tint to its RGB equivalent. I have discovered that the RGB equivalents reported by CorelDRAW X5 differ — depending on which method is used. I saved a PMS tint to the Color Styles mini-palette, then right-clicked to open the Edit Color Style panel and determine the equivalent RGB components. However, if an object which uses the exact same PMS tint as used in the Color Style is instead examined in the Object Properties panel, different RGB values are reported.Â