![]() This will show a bit more texture in those areas, but will reintroduce that sparkle.Ĭonsider adding extra texture and sharpness to the image before you open in PP. When processing, you can reduce the effect of toned-down highlights by removing the retouching mask from some of the highlight spots. In processing the file before loading into PP, up the highlights/whites a bit as PP tends to tone them down and you lose a bit of sparkle in the end result. I am not a pro at this, but wanted to share a few tips I have learned from trial and error. HOW do I prevent the software from increasing exposure like this? ![]() If you look at the image below, you can see that the white sweater worn by the woman in the middle is totally blown out in the 'After' whereas the 'Before' is just fine. I'm used to PP brightening the image slightly, and what appears to be happening is that it's multiplying that amount of exposure increase by the number of people in the image. I've turned off ALL of the modules in 'General' and set all the options in 'Presets' to 'Original', but that still doesn't correct the issue. The image I'm working on has eight people in it, and all I want PP to do is "cover up the worst of the their sins" - this isn't a commercial model shot, but when I load the image, correct the sex identity and then let it run the auto processing, the exposure, especially in the whites & highlights jumps 1-2 stops. When I am working on an image with multiple faces, the background exposure is increased to the point where highlights are blown and the image rendered unusable. there's a HUGE issue that I cannot seem to find a resolution for. I recently upgraded to PP 21 Studio Max from (IIRC V15).
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