![]() ![]() See, for example, the "Skin Glow" style which selects skin tones and increases saturation and luminosity on those tones. Don't forget to select "Color Mask" in the top right window to see which parts of your image are color-selected. Then play with the Hue value, and possibly the other adjustments. What you could do, though, is to use one or more Hue/Saturation tools with the Color Selection tab used to select which color range will be worked on (and possibly a region to limit the area of the picture). ![]() ![]() I'm not really familiar with that function, but based on that article, I'd say that there isn't a direct equivalent in LightZone. But, given the price, not trying it is the only mistake I can see anyone making with LightZone. If it doesn't work out, delete the program. It's free, it loads easily and quickly without bringing along any unwanted bugs that I can detect. I'd say, give the editor a try, you have nothing to lose really. I haven't gone far enough into the software to really push any limits. But, then, maybe you can do everything with LightZone. If you have good editing skills, I can't see much you couldn't do with LightZone. There are videos and articles, blogs and so forth and probably if I were coming from a modern editing software system, these would make far more sense to me. While the tools are rather intuitive in LightZone, the most negative comment I can make is I cannot find any tutorials to help get into the nitty gritty of LightZone. IMO as Tex has said, yes, you can do remarkable things with freeware. I found dpreview's comment on LightZone and added it to my Windows 7 (64 bit) PC. PS and so forth seemed to be too much for what I felt I would be doing. None the less, I now have a new Canon SL1 and needed some software. I'm not the person who enjoys sitting at a computer for any amount of time after I've taken a shot. And I actually began to use my ten year old Rebel Xt less and less due to the menus of the camera and the requirements of post production. I may not be your ideal responder since I haven't used PS in years. ![]()
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