Quite confusing.For the sake of argument, I will concede that Photoshop will do it and Gimp can't.I would add though, that with Gimp, things that Photoshop does is quickly added to Gimp.įor example, give me credit where I linked that Gimp can do 'Vibrance' now.My final statement is that still I believe Gimp is a powerful retouching tool.
HowaboutRAW,I must admit, all I can come up with when I search for tutorials about selective coloring are the ones where you produce an image for example where all is black and white and something in the image is colored.This, I admit, is different from the Selective Coloring you speak of, but the term is so confusing since it was already defined as creating an image where a color is selected in and the other colors are minimized or selected out or toned down to black and white.This is like you defining an Apple as one thing and me searching for 'Apple' to try to find it's other definition.
(Don’t know the last Mac OS that will work.)To my mind “cross blending” is indeed available in both GIMP and PhotoShop through the Color Balance feature. (VueScan won’t do.) You can use the last iteration of the scanner line, so Konica-Minolta too, you’ll need an XP computer or one running Win7 Pro. (There indeed may be a way, but I more than suspect that way would involve some extra programing code.)Or get a Minolta film scanner and find their version of the same effect. Or whatever that particular website said.I look at the changes, that’s a big reason I suggest actually using selective color in Photoshop before just assuming there must be a way to do the same thing in GIMP.
John125:I don’t spend a lot of time looking at the terms Adobe uses to describe the process. It's really quite simple:Post a url to a tutorial or video of something Photoshop does that Gimp can't.All your talk of doing google searches about Gimp or doing google searches about Photoshop prove nothing.You're the one that said Photoshop can do things Gimp can't, so show us the url to the web pages proving that.Simply give me a url (an page) of things Photoshop does that Gimp doesn't, then we'll go from there.I could care less about google, show me the webpage of the tutorial or video. (Careful, I don't want to read claims that there is no yellow in blue.). I have yet to see that anywhere else but in very good film scanning software. That is why one has to look at Photoshop.My example of yellow out of blue, from above, is a good one.
Johnqadams,Simply a Google search of the term 'GIMP selective color' turns up nothing useful.Now, Michael P, if free to Google search 'Photoshop Selective Color' and from there figure out what it does, or find a copy of Photoshop to try.But be forewarned:Such links as:Are NOT the selective color feature of Photoshop.Various other links generated from Google search can mislead too. Fixed issues with chromatic aberration specific to the Samsung NX1.
Tokina AT-X 166 PRO DX II 11-16 F2.8 (Sony Alpha)Bug Fixes. Tokina AT-X 70-200mm F4 PRO FX VCM-S (Nikon F). Sony ILCE-A7M2New Lens Profile Support in Camera Raw 8.7. The new features listed in the release notes are only available in Photoshop CC.Release NotesNew Camera Support in Camera Raw 8.7.1. DNG Converter 8.7.1 is provided for customers using versions of Photoshop older than Photoshop CS6.As mentioned here, updates to Camera Raw 8 for Photoshop CS6 only include new camera support, lens profile support, and bug fixes. This release includes support for the Sony ILCE-A7M2 and also includes a bug fix related to support for the Samsung NX1 camera.
See the full details from Adobe below.Camera Raw 8.7.1 is now available as a final release for Photoshop CS6 and Photoshop CC.
A bug related to chromatic aberration with the Samsung NX1 has also been addressed in this update. Adobe Camera Raw 8.7.1 final release is now available, adding support for the Sony Alpha 7 II and a handful of lens profiles including the EF 24-105mm f/3.5-5.6 IS STM and EF-S 24mm f/2.8 STM from Canon.