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Best Way To Get Rid Of Glowing Eyes Lol


J.H.M
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I took this pic with the flash and I think I was too close and Jessie has evil glowing eyes, what is the best way to get rid of it? I only have iphoto and when I edit, it looks like poop :banghead:

P1000305.jpg

Edited by JRM75
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i hope you don't mind, i had a play with your pic in iphoto. red eye changes the colour of the glow, takes the blue out of it.

then i tried retouch, and that does take away the glowing, but now your dogs eyes are solid black lol (it looks quite bizarre. will try and post it)

post-2120-1268728488_thumb.jpg

Edited by carebear
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As far as I know, there is no program which as quite worked out how to do it. I've seen several tutorials online which look like they make the eye look 100% better but when you try them on your own photos, they don't work as well.

Most of the photoshopped eyes I've seen where the dog has had glowing green eyes before have looked like the dog has cartoon eyes once they've been "fixed".

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Red-eye tools aren't meant to use on animal eyes in any of the systems, only made for human red-eye.

Photo-shop is the 'best' but it is still unsatisfactory as above comments confirm. And with in-camera flash there are always destroyed eyes and other blown-out highlights in the coat that can't be restored.

Much better to have a go at controlling your lighting. Try a cheap 'workshop lamp' from Bunnings, change the yellow globe in it for a daylight one. Set it above the subject, maybe off to one side a bit. Put a plain sheet behind the subject so you don't have conflicting lines and reflective junk things spoiling the image. Or get an on-camera flash outfit that you can adjust to point towards a reflector or the ceiling to reflect light down. Or put a fine split from a Kleenex over the flash to diffuse it a bit. All of that is as quick as spending a lot of time in photoshop trying to fix the unfixable, and cheaper than buying Photoshop.

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Here's my attempt - not perfect, but about the best I can do with a quick play - see what you think :(

post-3516-1268733493_thumb.jpg

I started with this tutorial http://www.myjanee.com/tuts/peteyes/peteyes.htm - but I also do touch ups beyond what is in there to try and get a more natural effect. Some photos are easy to fix, others are pretty much impossible - it depends on how much glow there is and how much of a closeup the photo is. It's harder to pick "fixes" when it's not a closeup! :D

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Red-eye tools aren't meant to use on animal eyes in any of the systems, only made for human red-eye.

Photo-shop is the 'best' but it is still unsatisfactory as above comments confirm. And with in-camera flash there are always destroyed eyes and other blown-out highlights in the coat that can't be restored.

Much better to have a go at controlling your lighting. Try a cheap 'workshop lamp' from Bunnings, change the yellow globe in it for a daylight one. Set it above the subject, maybe off to one side a bit. Put a plain sheet behind the subject so you don't have conflicting lines and reflective junk things spoiling the image. Or get an on-camera flash outfit that you can adjust to point towards a reflector or the ceiling to reflect light down. Or put a fine split from a Kleenex over the flash to diffuse it a bit. All of that is as quick as spending a lot of time in photoshop trying to fix the unfixable, and cheaper than buying Photoshop.

cool thank you that makes sense. I will just have to make my pic taking time during the day outside or try to get the lighting better inside at night if I take pics

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  • 4 months later...

I think the reason that the dogs end up with creepy basement dog eyes is because they no longer have a catchlight in them. Maybe if you add a little sparkle to each eye after removing the glow might make it a little less unreal :laugh:

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