BetterPhoto Member |
How to Fix Lighting Flares in Digital Photograph Attached is an example of what I'm trying to accomplish, if it's possible. Notice the white hot spot created by the light in the photograph. I'm pretty sure there is not much that can be done to remove it. But is there a way of toning it down so that it doesn't seem so intense? Thanks in advance.
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
Wing Wong |
Well, the image you have posted with the question isn't really light flare, but a lot of diffuse light. There is some kind of "fog" in the air which is dispersing the light from the spotlights. This is resulting in your whiting out. Some suggestions would include moving and changing your angle to not include a direct blast from the light source. If you can't do that, you can use a graduated ND filter with the darkened end towards the light source and the undarkened end towards the crowd. This will cut down on the light from the light source and let you expose the crowd properly. The grad filter is used by landscape photographers to even out setting sun and letting the details from the darkening landscape come through.
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
- Gregory LaGrange Contact Gregory LaGrange Gregory LaGrange's Gallery |
It's not the smoke; it's including the light source in your picture. The other lights are doing the same thing, just that one is bigger and pointing more directly at you. With feathering on the lasso or eliptical outline tool, you can darken it with levels, curves, and contrast. But since it's so hot, the brightest part of the white will get a color shift to yellow. That's what happens trying to go too far with darkening highlights with no detail in digital. You can only do a little bit of darkening before it gets too contrasty and bad color. To remove it, try the clone tool. Clone some of the darker areas with the smoke, and try to make it look like part of it rises up into that area.
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
Michael Kaplan |
I used magic wand to select the white part; tolerance 40.
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
Gail Cimino |
In my experience with large white spots like this, Photoshop adjustments work best after blurring the area, if you don't mind that effect. You could use the blurring tool selectively, or select the whole ceiling area and apply a gaussian blur. Then try burning just the whitest area, or any of the other solutions recommended above.
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
John A. Lind |
Wing's correct that there's smoke or dust and that is causing some of the effect, but it's only very secondary. The overwhelming primary one is the lens flare Gregory mentions from aiming directly at the light. While there may be some things you can do "post-processing" to try to fix this, you cannot get back the detail that was there. The best "fix" is in the future. In addition to what Wing mentions about watching the lighting dirction and your camera direction to avoid this . . . -- John Lind
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
This old forum is now archived. Use improved Forum here
Report this Thread |