Red-eye in photos is a common problem. When light from the camera’s flash reflects off the retina of a photo subject, a red-eye effect is captured in the photo. Corel PaintShop Pro has two methods of removing red‑eye from a color photo.
The fastest method of removal is to use the Red Eye tool. A more powerful method is to use the advanced Red Eye Removal command, which lets you change the eye color.
The Red Eye tool replaces the red color in the subject’s pupil with a dark gray color, restoring a natural look.
Edit workspace
You can zoom in on the photo, if necessary, for better control of the Red Eye tool.
You can size the pointer interactively by holding down Alt while dragging the Red Eye tool over the eye area.
Edit workspace
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Choose Adjust Red Eye Removal. |
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Note: The Hue drop-list is available only for the Auto Human Eye method. |
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From the Method drop-list, choose one of the following correction methods: |
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Auto Human Eye — automatically selects the correction area and chooses settings appropriate for a human eye |
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Auto Animal Eye — automatically selects the correction area and chooses settings appropriate for an animal eye. This method lets you rotate the selection. |
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Freehand Pupil Outline — lets you use the Freehand Selection tool to select the correction area for human or animal eyes |
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For the Auto Human Eye or Auto Animal Eye method, click inside the red area of the eye to select the eye automatically, or drag from the center of the eye to the outside edge of the red area. |
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For the Freehand Pupil Outline method, drag around the edge of the red area of the pupil until you reach the beginning point of the selection. |
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For the Point-to-Point Pupil Outline method, click around the edge of the red area of the pupil, and double-click when you reach the beginning point. You can reverse a click by right-clicking. |
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Note: If you choose the Freehand Pupil Outline method or the Point-to-Point Pupil Outline method, confine the selection area to the pupil of the eye (the small dark circle at the eye’s center). These methods are designed to correct the pupil area, where red-eye occurs, without changing the surrounding iris. |
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Pupil lightness — specifies the amount of lightness in the pupil so that the corrected eye matches the natural eye color |
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Iris size — specifies the size of the iris. Increasing the iris size decreases the pupil size. |
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Glint lightness — specifies the lightness of the glint. Lower values darken the glint; higher values lighten it. |
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Feather — adjusts the edges of the corrected eye so that they appear to blend into the surrounding image areas or appear more defined. Lower values make the edges more defined; higher values blend the edges into the surrounding image areas. |
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Blur — blends the eye with surrounding pixels when the photo has a grainy appearance. You can increase the setting one unit at a time until the eye blends naturally with the rest of the image. |
The Refine slider helps you correct red-eye when the eye is partially obscured in the original photo. For example, if the eyelid covers part of the eye in the original photo, it should also cover that part of the eye in the corrected photo. Dragging the slider to the left reduces the correction and minimizes its overlap with the surrounding skin.
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