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Old 29-03-2012, 06:01 PM
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alistairsam
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Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Box Hill North, Vic
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Hi Justin,

The other way in photoshop is to use the eyedropper tool and the RGB values,
just hover it over the stars and it'll show you the rgb component.
I used to use that extensively with the printing industry when my monitor wasn't calibrated so we check either RGB or cmyk values
I had a quick play with your image in gimp and came up with the attached, hope you don't mind. I still couldn't change the purple tinge though.
on 3 of my LCD's, there's a purplish tinge to the stars.
IMO, Just play around a bit more with the processing and change the hues on midtones or shadows and less on highlights, that would preserve star colours to a certain extent.
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