tom in mpls
Active member
Crazy moire. Even after removing most of the yellow, there remains lots of moire such as that in the left side of her bow (our right, her left).
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Thanks, Cindy. BTW, she tells me her date is the most BORING person in the world. As she is only a sophomore, I'm still sure it was a good experience. Ah, to be young again; I'm not so sure I could handle it.Moire or not, you have done a beautiful job of photographing your lovely daughter. I'm so glad you didn't sell it!
hahaha, i'm sure that is much more relieving to hear than her date being "incredibly exciting and passionate!" :ROTFL:Thanks, Cindy. BTW, she tells me her date is the most BORING person in the world. As she is only a sophomore, I'm still sure it was a good experience. Ah, to be young again; I'm not so sure I could handle it.
Thanks, Cindy. BTW, she tells me her date is the most BORING person in the world. As she is only a sophomore, I'm still sure it was a good experience. Ah, to be young again; I'm not so sure I could handle it.
:ROTFL::ROTFL::ROTFL:Boring is good news when you are the father of a beautiful 16 year old.hahaha, i'm sure that is much more relieving to hear than her date being "incredibly exciting and passionate!" :ROTFL:
Don't for a minute think that I'm unaware of that.:thumbup::ROTFL::ROTFL::ROTFL:Boring is good news when you are the father of a beautiful 16 year old.
Actually Bob - see above, Aperture removed it completely as far as I can see, and it took secondsTom several people have offered suggestions as to how the moire may be reduced but none completely remove it.
Hi Bob - of course, we haven't seen the material, but I was assuming that the actual pattern may have been there (I've certainly seen silk like that), at any rate, whether 'real' or not, it's hardly offensive enough to need dealing with.Hi Jono, on the examples you posted it looks as if the luminance component is still there. There's no color but some pattern remains. Maybe what's left isn't sensor moire but is because the fabric is semi transparent and multilayerd. The pattern is generated between the weave of the layers. The Lab method I described certainly reduces the pattern to a similar level.
Bob.
Isn't it much simpler to use the color replacement brush ?Tom several people have offered suggestions as to how the moire may be reduced but none completely remove it. If you have Photoshop one way to remove the color component is as follows. Open the file and use the mode function to convert from RGB to Lab. Now use the selection tool to select the dress or areas containing moire. Show the channels and select the a channel. Now use filters/gaussian blur and adjust the radius until the moire is no longer visible (10-20 pixels). Now repeat with the b channel. If you now view Lab you will see that the moire color has gone. Convert back to RGB.
This doesn't remove the luminance component of the moire so it's still visible, but not colored. C1 seems to make a good job of removing the luminance component and any color remaing could be removed as I've just described.
ETA: I've just realized you have C1. Use that to remove most of the moire and then the technique I've described to remove the remaining color.
Bob.
I tried that but found it didn't work too well. There are subtle color variations throughout the dress which are lost when you use the color replacement brush. If you keep sampling adjacent colors to avoid this then it becomes a lot of work.Isn't it much simpler to use the color replacement brush ?