SHO - The Photoshop Plugin that Reveals Details Hidden in Shadows FREE Trial Download Buy Now $49.95ĭIGITAL GEM Plug-Ins - Reduce Image Noise and Grain SHO Pro - The Photoshop Plugin that Reveals Details Hidden in Highlights & Shadows FREE Trial Download Buy Now $99.95 Great for fixing common exposure problems caused by backlit subjects, uneven flash illumination and partial shade. The DIGITAL SHO Plug-In, for ADOBE PHOTOSHOP and compatible programs, automatically reveals image details hidden in shadow areas with the professional version also revealing details from highlights and supporting 16-bit. PS - Also, Kodak/ASF Applied Science Fiction makes the "3/4" of Digital Ice 3/4 available as separate software packages (features and benefits also available through other suppliers) that work on ANY image, and can "enhance" the "qualities" of your scans - see ĭIGITAL SHO Plug-Ins - Optimize Exposure of Shadow & Highlight Areas Can you tell us a little more about what you are after? What do you have that you do not what, and what do you want that you do not have? Scott, I think there must be a balance between artistic and scientific approaches. (b) See Michael Mutmansky's fascinating article in September/October 2005 "View Camera" magazine pages 53-58, entitled "Considerations in Scanning The Large Format Film" where he specifically clips highlights and shadows on purpose because he WANTS to have appropriate paper-white and ink-black in the end result, and does not fall slave to the presumptive non-choice of "maximizing the histogram" at the expense of artistic and intentional control over the final image. (a) Any limit on manually adjusting the histogram with ANY software, Minolta's own or other? I'm curious about the comment about clipping highlights and shadows. In other words, it may not be the software as much as the "artist" making choices with ANY software, that makes the difference. Anyone else? Do the scanners scan Green only when told to scan black and white film anyway? Speaking of black and white scans, I've been scanning black and white as RGB and then discarding the Red and Blue channels as the Green channel seems least noisy, and I get less noise than by scanning "black and white" and letting the scanner mix the results.
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