I have a few thousand images with a horseshoe shaped shadow caused by interference with my flash. I was wondering if it would be possible
to increase the gain in the shadow areas to bring them up to a level similar to the rest of the photo? Is there an easy way to do this? Thanks.
Sam
Can I use a mask to change exposure values?
- fmw42
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Re: Can I use a mask to change exposure values?
Probably no easy way. You need to process the image to brighten the areas as you want them (while the other areas get overly bright). Then create a tapered mask for that area as the shadow areas probably do not have clearly defined edges. Then use the mask image to blend or composite the original and the processed image to merge them so that outside the shadow part of the mask you use the original image and inside the shadow part of the mask you use the enhanced image and in the taper area you blend both.
- anthony
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Re: Can I use a mask to change exposure values?
It is actually very hard to say what can be done. Their are techniques to darken or brighten various areas of the image, but making the change work in a large number of cases for multiple colors, brightness, and of course the area mask, is not such an easy task.
You first step may be to direct your query to a photography forum of some type, and see what they have to say first. when you have a possible technique then we may be able to help you implement it.
You first step may be to direct your query to a photography forum of some type, and see what they have to say first. when you have a possible technique then we may be able to help you implement it.
Anthony Thyssen -- Webmaster for ImageMagick Example Pages
https://imagemagick.org/Usage/
https://imagemagick.org/Usage/
- fmw42
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Re: Can I use a mask to change exposure values?
If the areas are not the same in each image, then a separate mask is needed for each. Probably a better solution is to use the dodge and/or burn tools with a paint brush in Photoshop or GIMP.