Choose Enhance > Adjust Color > Remove Color Cast.
- Photoshop Elements User Guide
- Introduction to Photoshop Elements
- Workspace and environment
- Fixing and enhancing photos
- Resize images
- Cropping
- Process camera raw image files
- Add blur, replace colors, and clone image areas
- Adjust shadows and light
- Retouch and correct photos
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- Using actions to process photos
- Photomerge Compose
- Create a panorama
- Moving Overlays
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- Quick Actions
- Guided edits, effects, and filters
- Guided mode
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- Working with colors
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- Keyboard shortcuts
- Keys for selecting tools
- Keys for selecting and moving objects
- Keys for the Layers panel
- Keys for showing or hiding panels (expert mode)
- Keys for painting and brushes
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- Keys for viewing images (expertmode)
Remove a color cast automatically
A color cast is an unpleasant color shift in a photo. For example, a photo taken indoors without a camera flash may have too much yellow. The Remove Color Cast command changes the overall mixture of colors to remove color casts from an image.
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In your image, click an area that should be white, black, or neutral gray. The image changes based on the color you selected.
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To start over and undo the changes made to the image, click Reset.
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Click OK to accept the color change.
Remove a color cast using Levels
This technique requires color correction experience and some knowledge of the RGB color wheel.
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Do one of the following:
- Choose Enhance > Adjust Lighting > Levels.
- Choose Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Levels, or open an existing Levels adjustment layer.
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Choose a color channel to adjust from the Channel pop‑up menu:
- Red to add red or cyan to the image.
- Green to add green or magenta to the image.
- Blue to add blue or yellow to the image.
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Drag the middle input slider left or right to add or subtract color.
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Click OK when you are satisfied with the overall color.
You can use the gray color picker in the Levels dialog box to quickly remove a color cast. Double-click the color picker and make sure that the RGB values are equal. After you close the Color Picker, click an area in your image that should be a neutral gray.
Adjust color curves
The Adjust Color Curves command improves color tones in a photo by adjusting highlights, midtones, and shadows in each color channel. For example, this command can fix photos with silhouetted images resulting from strong backlighting, or slightly washed-out objects that were too close to the camera’s flash.
In the Adjust Color Curves dialog box, you can compare and choose different tonal presets. Select from the list of styles in the Select A Style box. To fine-tune the adjustment, adjust the highlights, midtone brightness and contrast, and shadows.
A. Select a Style (choose from presets) B. Adjust Sliders (custom options)
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In Photoshop Elements, open an image.
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To adjust a specific image area or layer, select it with one of the selection tools. (If no selection is made, the adjustment applies to the entire image.)Merk:
To preserve the original photo while experimenting with tonal adjustments, adjust the color curves in a duplicate layer.
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Choose Enhance > Adjust Color > Adjust Color Curves.
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Select a style (for example, Backlight or Solarize).
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Adjust the sliders for Highlights, Midtone Brightness, Midtone Contrast, and Shadows.
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To apply the adjustment to your image, click OK. To cancel the adjustment and start over, click Reset. To close the Adjust Color Curves dialog box, click Cancel.