SnakeAround
Formerly Blutengel
Rich Z said:What version of PhotoShop are you using?
You need to understand some limitations of programmable adjustments in photographs. There are conditions known as washout in highlights, and blackouts in shadowed and darkened areas. What this means is that detail is actually lost in those instances. Areas that are too bright may be all white, and areas that are too dark will be all black. In reality there are details that an adjustment in the exposure of the camera or proper utilization of flash, would have been able to capture. When an image is whited out of blacked out, no program on earth can bring back those details that were not captured within the photo. All it can do is to make the whited out area darker, and the blacked out area lighter. It cannot bring forth hidden details that were destroyed by an improper exposure.
Programmatically, I think it would be extremely difficult for a program to be able to determine shadows from naturally occurring lighter and darker areas side by side. How does it know that instead of a white card laying on a black card the same size and shape, that the dark area exposed underneath is really a shadow instead?
How would it know that a ball that is sun faded on one side really looks that way and the darker area is not just a shadow?
All it knows is colors of pixels, not the INTENT of what the image is supposed to show.
Yeah, computer programs have gotten pretty smart, but they are not perfect and cannot do miracles.
So my recommendation would be to take care in taking the original photograph so you don't have to wind up wishing that your computer software can pull a rabbit out of a hat for you.
Thanks Rich for explaining. I do now that all the adjustment features are no miracle tools, I'm surprised my half jokingly comment is taken so serious. But since you seem ok with this 'off topic' topic I'll show you what i mean. I use PS CS 8.0.1. These are a before and after adjustment example, the adjustment was made in the image menu, adjustments and then shadow/highlights. I do understand that the program cannot know the difference between shadow and just black, and that if a pic is not sharp or detailed, it won't get sharper or more detailed. But somehow this adjustment makes it look like someone turned on the light in the picture, which is very nice when daylight is cloudy but sufficient to give sharp pictures. It does not add detail, but detail that is hardly visible shows up better, for example in the black area's behind the head you see scales better. I use flash less now, but use this feature instead so there is no wash out of colors but a more 'sunny' look. Of course natural bright sunlight is better, but this seems a good way to make pictures look better IMO. They show my snakes colors how I see them.
I added another example, watch the foot in the down left corner. You actually see it is a foot easily after the adjustment, before you didn't.