finding neutral gray? Please help?

LH
Posted By
lynn.herrick
Jun 10, 2004
Views
6280
Replies
8
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Closed
Hi, I am occasionally having colour cast problems with some of my photos and I know I should be finding a neutral gray point on my photo and then using the grey eyedropper in levels to help. Problem is, I can’t seem to FIND neautral gray in color images.
I can get the blackest and whitest points using threshold and am wondering if there’s a similar way of finding grey?
I’m sure many people can simply look at a photo and see where gray is, but I, sadly, don’t seem to be one of them. If there’s a way in PS CS to find the grey, I would SO love to know what it is. Thanks so much for all ideas! Lynn

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Mike Russell
Jun 10, 2004
Lynn wrote:
Hi, I am occasionally having colour cast problems with some of my photos and I know I should be finding a neutral gray point on my photo and then using the grey eyedropper in levels to help. Problem is, I can’t seem to FIND neautral gray in color images.
I can get the blackest and whitest points using threshold and am wondering if there’s a similar way of finding grey?

Setting black and white points (or shadow and highlight) is probably the single most important correction you can make to an image. Using threshold is actually a rather blunt instrument that can cause color casts in your final image.

I’m sure many people can simply look at a photo and see where gray is, but I, sadly, don’t seem to be one of them.

Common gray objects: sidewalks, white shirts, asphalt pavement, household appliances.

If there’s a way in PS CS to find the grey, I would SO love to know what
it is. Thanks so much
for all ideas! Lynn

The Curvemeister plugin has several features to help you deal with finding the gray. When it is necessary to feel around for a gray point, I like to click on curvemeister’s Lab radio button, put down a neutral point, and drag it around to until the image suddenly clicks in. You may do a similar move in Photoshop using an eyedropper point, and adjusting curves until the red, green, and blue are equal. Or set the eyedropper to HSB mode, and adjusting curves until the Saturation goes to zero

I emphasize, though that it’s best, if possible to zero in on a particular object that you are reasonably sure is gray, and there may simply be no gray objects in the image. In that case, you go on to the next step, which is to avoid impossible colors in the image.

Check out the Curvemeister demo, which is 100% functional as far as the tutorials are concerned – I have one customer who used the demo to teach a class (!). Each of the examples deals with finding the highlight, shadow, and neutral, and the concepts are valuable whether or not you decide to spend the $34.95 for the actual plugin.


Mike Russell
www.geigy.2y.net
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Al Denelsbeck
Jun 10, 2004
(Lynn) wrote in
news::

Hi, I am occasionally having colour cast problems with some of my photos and I know I should be finding a neutral gray point on my photo and then using the grey eyedropper in levels to help. Problem is, I can’t seem to FIND neautral gray in color images.
I can get the blackest and whitest points using threshold and am wondering if there’s a similar way of finding grey?
I’m sure many people can simply look at a photo and see where gray is, but I, sadly, don’t seem to be one of them. If there’s a way in PS CS to find the grey, I would SO love to know what it is. Thanks so much for all ideas! Lynn

Finding it in the photo takes a little bit of practice. You have to detach yourself from seeing it as a representation of "real life", and see it as a painting where you need to produce and apply all the colors.

Very often, if there is anything white in the scene going into shadow, you can peg neutral grey easily. Slightly harder is something black with bright highlights. Both of these can be pulled off of someone’s clothing without too much difficulty. You can also find something silver or chrome – very often, in the range of reflections it displays, you’ll find grey, though it may be a very narrow band. The undersides of puffy clouds will work, asphalt in some cases, roofing tiles, and even reflections from rippled water.

Not knowing what kind of photography you do makes it harder to give anything more specific 😉

Want practice? Set your primary fill color in the color picker to mid-grey by setting Lab color to 50-0-0 or RGB to 119-119-119, then Select/Color Range and use a smaller fuzziness factor, 50-60 should do. This will select all the neutral grey in a corrected image. Do this with a few different ‘typical’ images and you’ll soon learn what to watch for.

Hope this helps. Good luck!

– Al.


To reply, insert dash in address to separate G and I in the domain
T
Toby
Jun 11, 2004
You can use the info tab to measure the RGB levels. Any neutral gray should have equal values for all three colors. A bit of exploring may point you in the right direction by showing you consistent imbalances in favor of one or two colors.

Depending on the PS version you can try "Auto Levels" and/or "Auto Color".

That being said it is nearly impossible to judge a neutral gray by eye without a reference, since the brain tends to "auto white balance" depending on overall color temperature and proximity of other colors.

There is no way to find a gray point as you find a black or white point. The latter two are based on the assumption that at max transparency a film is going to be neutral at 255/255/255 and at max density it will be neutral at 0/0/0 (more or less). This is not necessarily true but it is usually somewhat close.

I find that the easiest way to remove color casts quickly (color correction is really an complicated art) is to use the color balance control. This gives you the option of correcting colors at three different luminance levels. If you find that a particular correction works well for a certain type of film or situation you can save the correction as an action and apply it easily to other images. Or you can just fire randomly with the gray point eyedropper and hope to find something that looks good.

Needless to say, a correctly calibrated monitor is important when doing color corrections.

My 2 cents.

Toby
"Lynn" wrote in message
Hi, I am occasionally having colour cast problems with some of my photos and I know I should be finding a neutral gray point on my photo and then using the grey eyedropper in levels to help. Problem is, I can’t seem to FIND neautral gray in color images.
I can get the blackest and whitest points using threshold and am wondering if there’s a similar way of finding grey?
I’m sure many people can simply look at a photo and see where gray is, but I, sadly, don’t seem to be one of them. If there’s a way in PS CS to find the grey, I would SO love to know what it is. Thanks so much for all ideas! Lynn
N
nomail
Jun 11, 2004
Lynn wrote:

Hi, I am occasionally having colour cast problems with some of my photos and I know I should be finding a neutral gray point on my photo and then using the grey eyedropper in levels to help. Problem is, I can’t seem to FIND neautral gray in color images.
I can get the blackest and whitest points using threshold and am wondering if there’s a similar way of finding grey?
I’m sure many people can simply look at a photo and see where gray is, but I, sadly, don’t seem to be one of them. If there’s a way in PS CS to find the grey, I would SO love to know what it is. Thanks so much for all ideas! Lynn

Another way of learning to ‘see’ a color cast, is to use ‘Image – Adjust – Variations’. Not to actually correct a color cast perhaps, but just to see how different corrections would change the image.


Johan W. Elzenga johan<<at>>johanfoto.nl Editor / Photographer http://www.johanfoto.nl/
JF
John Forest
Jun 11, 2004
An easy way to find the areas close to neutral gray is to use the eyedropper tool with the info palette active. Neutral gray (50% gray) gives an RGB value of 128-128-128, so any value you find close to this would be close to neutral gray. In practice, bring up levels and select the neutral eyedropper. With the info palette active explore the image watching the info palette. Any value where the RGB values are close to equal would be a candidate for your selection. The value that shows the highest number would indicate the color cast you will remove from the image. For example, if the RGB values are 55,51,51 and you click on that spot you will remove a bit of red from the image. The neutral eyedropper does not realign the colors to 50% gray, but only changes the image to make the values equal for the area you select.
H
Hecate
Jun 12, 2004
On Fri, 11 Jun 2004 13:20:03 +0200, (Johan W.
Elzenga) wrote:

Another way of learning to ‘see’ a color cast, is to use ‘Image – Adjust – Variations’. Not to actually correct a color cast perhaps, but just to see how different corrections would change the image.

Good point. I sometimes drop an image into variations when I *know* there’s a colour cast, but can’t work out what it is.

Play around with the variations a bit until you find what the problem is, then cancel and correct the colour properly.



Hecate

veni, vidi, reliqui
TB
the_bulldog
Jun 25, 2004
In article ,
says…
Hi, I am occasionally having colour cast problems with some of my photos and I know I should be finding a neutral gray point on my photo and then using the grey eyedropper in levels to help. Problem is, I can’t seem to FIND neautral gray in color images.
I can get the blackest and whitest points using threshold and am wondering if there’s a similar way of finding grey?
I’m sure many people can simply look at a photo and see where gray is, but I, sadly, don’t seem to be one of them. If there’s a way in PS CS to find the grey, I would SO love to know what it is. Thanks so much for all ideas! Lynn

There are some good Replies to your article, but if this is happening very often, you might want to include an 18% gray card in one exposure for reference. That way, you will have a true reference for your capture device, your lighting, etc. If you find the cast occurs often, you can correct it and Save the correction to Curves, or whatever is your favourite method of colour correction in PS. That should give you a starting point when doing the correction.
G
Gaston
Jul 31, 2014
One of the quickest, well documented is to use a gray layer and a threshold layer.

Create fill layer, GRAY, blend set to difference
Create threshold layer
Move slider arrow to the left
Slide it back slowly to the right.
The first black pixels that appear are you gray area.
Using the color picker set to 1 pixel mark one of the pixel location Inactivate both layers (fill and threshold)

Create a level adjustment layer.
Use the mid tone probe, click on marked pixel.

You are done. You can delete both fill and threshold layers.

Exclamation Please note that while this method helps adjust the black it is far from fool proof as what it does is find the pixels who value is nearest to gray. If you do have any gray you will find an approximation not the real thing. This method works in about 90% of the cases. Exclamation

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