Fix Any Color will fix the colors in your digital images
Frequently Asked Questions:
(1) What is Fix Any Color's "selective color adjustment"?
(2) What is L*C*h* color space and why does Fix Any Color use it?
(3) What types of digital images does Fix Any Color work with?
(4) What do the "edge" values in the color ranges do? How should I set them?
(5) What if I want to adjust a color in one part of my image but ignore similar colors elsewhere?
(6) How can I make grass look greener?
(7) How can I make flowers look better?
(8) How can I make skin tones from my digital images look better?
Answer to selected question:
Most image editing programs adjust colors by making global adjustments to images. For example, if you are making an image lighter, then the entire image will become lighter. Fix Any Color takes a different approach. Fix Any Color only adjusts the colors that need to be adjusted, and it adjusts them in precisely the way that you want. For example, consider the example of trying to adjust a picture of a flower. Imagine that you are trying to make the flower's color look deeper and more saturated. If you make all the colors in the image more saturated (i.e. make a global adjustment), then the increased color saturation of the flower color won't be noticed much. If you just make the flower more saturated while keeping the rest of the image the same then viewers will really notice the color of the flower more. Professionals routinely use this technique to emphasize the parts of images that they want you to focus on.
Home
|
Fix Any Color Affiliate Program
|
SRS1 Software Homepage
|
Links
|
Site Map
© 2007 Copyright SRS1 Software