![]() Why? Going back to the two parents, my corrected version has the building as a strong yellow. Yet the Darken version (left) seems greener than the Darker Color version (right). The same two sourcefiles create both versions above. And here is a case where Darken and Darker Color get clearly different results. So I put the Auto Tone version on a new layer on top of mine, and changed the blending mode. It seemed to me, though, that I could take advantage of the fact that most of the shadow in the Auto Tone version is darker than in my correction, without necessarily damaging the lighter areas. The apparently obvious solution is to blend these two through a layer mask that leaves the lighter half of my image alone but substitutes, to some extent, the darker half of the Auto Tone version. This is not just a matter of color: note, for example, the better definition of the clouds at right. The corrected version seems clearly better in all light areas. I thought it might also be usable to alter the building, but was disappointed. ![]() Top, the correction previously shown bottom, the original after Auto Tone has been applied.Īuto Tone forces neutrality into the shadow, which is what I was after. ![]()
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