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2007-12-29 20:00:37 · 6 answers · asked by Jerkwithhotsauce 4 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

I really did mean green eyes, I took a digital pic of my dog tonight and his eyes were glowing GREEN in the pic, I'll try that prog, thanx

2007-12-29 21:09:19 · update #1

thanks all of you for your ideas. It was a super pic of my jack russell, he was sleeping, his tongue was sticking out and his ears were all cute and flopped over. At the last second (well, I was right up in his face), he opened his eyes and ruined the shot with his glowing green eyes!! I'm going to try all the things you folks suggested and let you know which worked best. THANKS!

2007-12-30 08:58:23 · update #2

...it was really dark in the house. I was using a Nikon Coolpix 4300, automatic flash. I just bought another camera for my daughter, a Coolpix 5000. I still have to learn how to use that one, though. I can only work with what I've got! Taking pics of the dogs at night is difficult enough! Thanks.

2007-12-30 18:37:26 · update #3

6 answers

Ara's method works or you could seet your paintbrush on black at about 5% opacity and keep going over the eyes until they look right.

Or, you could clone in some other eyes like I did on my Flickr avatar... Look closely.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/samfeinstein/

2007-12-30 02:25:35 · answer #1 · answered by Picture Taker 7 · 0 0

Your digital camera should have some kind of CD-R that came with it to transfer your photos on to your computer. Most have some kind of photo-editing program included. To fix the green glow, you can do the "Red-Eye" option or use a drawing tool (paintbrush) to color in the pupil so the green doesn't show. Make sure that you increase your image size % to enlarge your eye area so that after you "fix" the eyes, it will look more natural when you reduce it back to normal size. Plus it makes it easier to see all of the eye this way too.

2007-12-30 05:19:40 · answer #2 · answered by superdot 3 · 0 0

Create a selection layer, then play with the color balance or its hue/saturation. The red eye function also works with proper use.

2007-12-30 10:53:36 · answer #3 · answered by banjo 2 · 0 0

Green eye? or do you mean Red eye?

If you are indeed trying to fix red eye, goto http://www.xnview.com/
download this free image viewer, it is great. zoom up on the eyes, drag a window over the pupil that is red and click then works beautiful.

If you are trying to fix green eyes... Maybe this will work too??

2007-12-30 04:07:27 · answer #4 · answered by seanb_111 1 · 0 1

In Photoshop. use lasso or mask and brush tool to select eye. Desaturate then use levels to darken until it looks natural. Most red eye tools won't work on "pet eye".

2007-12-30 09:02:59 · answer #5 · answered by Ara57 7 · 1 0

Since he was sleeping (not moving), you could have just taken the picture without a flash. I take almost all my pictures without a flash.

2007-12-31 01:26:11 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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