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How best to deal with pink or purple tint in cloudy sky

Explorer ,
Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

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I've seen this in a few of my photos taken of gray, cloudy skies and wondering how best to remove the tint:

False tint in cloudsFalse tint in clouds

I've tried cloning and level adjustments and neither of those methods worked well. I figure this is a pretty common problem but I couldn't find a topic on it in my searches. Suggestons?

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correct answers 2 Correct answers

Community Expert , Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

Try this:

1. Open the picture file

2. Activate the eye dropper and sample the light green/blue sky in your picture

3. Open a blank layer above the Background layer (Layer 1) Set the blending mode of  Layer 1 to "color"

4. Activate the Brush tool and set opacity to 50% and brush cursor to about 500 px. Gently brush over the areas that are to be corrected. Still on Layer 1, if there are some areas with sharp edges, use the smudge tool to soften the adjoining areas.

 

TIP: to increase/decrease the

...

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Advocate , Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

It looks like the white balance setting in your camera is off. Have you tried to reset your camera back to factory defaults? Or maybe set the white balance to Auto?

 

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LEGEND ,
Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

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I duplicated the background layer (Ctrl+J)

Used Layer >> Adjustment Layer >> Gradient Map

Pressed Alt and clipped the adjustment layer to layer 1

Double-Clicked in the gradient and selected a dark blue

Adjusted the slider between lightness and darkness focusing on the sky (but the whole image turns blue)

With layer 1 selected Press Alt and click on layer mask to block the adjustments with a black mask

Set the foreground color to white and use a large brush to brush over the sky to reveal the blue tint.

 

Gradient-Map-Adj.jpg

 

You don't need to use blue. You can select any color of your choice for the gradient including black or gray.

Purple-tinted-clouds_P1220397.jpg

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Community Expert ,
Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

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Try this:

1. Open the picture file

2. Activate the eye dropper and sample the light green/blue sky in your picture

3. Open a blank layer above the Background layer (Layer 1) Set the blending mode of  Layer 1 to "color"

4. Activate the Brush tool and set opacity to 50% and brush cursor to about 500 px. Gently brush over the areas that are to be corrected. Still on Layer 1, if there are some areas with sharp edges, use the smudge tool to soften the adjoining areas.

 

TIP: to increase/decrease the size of the brush cursor, use the bracket keys next to the letter P on the keyboard.

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Explorer ,
Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

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That worked perfectly! (Once I figured out that the unmarked dropdown next to Opacity was the blending mode.) It gave me exactly what I wanted. Thank you so much. I will try to find more information on the process, but can you briefly explain the concept to me? I've never used anything like that before, though it reminded me of the blending (if that's the correct term) process using layer masks.

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Community Expert ,
Aug 14, 2020 Aug 14, 2020

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You're very welcome. Glad to help.

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Advocate ,
Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

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It looks like the white balance setting in your camera is off. Have you tried to reset your camera back to factory defaults? Or maybe set the white balance to Auto?

 

--
Walter in Davie, FL

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Community Expert ,
Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

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My camera works very well, Sir.

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Advocate ,
Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

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Hi hatstead,

 

I'm a little curious why you would reply as if you were the original poster "gfbugaboo"?

 

I did not say that there was anything wrong with your Panasonic FZ-1000 camera. The EXIF data in your photo indicates that the white balance is set to "manual" and Exposure bias of -0.33 eV.

 

Gfbugaboo (original poster) asked for suggestions. That's what I offered in my reply.

 

And, here's a screenclip of the EXIF data from the photo that gfbugaboo posted.

screenclip of EXIF data from gfbugaboo photoscreenclip of EXIF data from gfbugaboo photo

 

 

--
Walter in Davie, FL

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Explorer ,
Aug 13, 2020 Aug 13, 2020

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I think you're right about that. I just checked by opening the RAW file again and changing the white balance from "As Shot" to "Auto," and the discoloring disappeared. So in fact, I could have simply corrected the photo by doing that (although I learned a new technique, so it was worth the extra work). It had been so long that I'd changed a white balance in Camera Raw that I had forgotten all about it. Now I won't.

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LEGEND ,
Aug 14, 2020 Aug 14, 2020

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That’s great to hear. We are always learning new tricks, including the most simple solutions, and we always encourage participation in the community. Thanks for your feedback.

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