218 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
218 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4330
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Title: HPR4330: GIMP: Fixing Photos
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4330/hpr4330.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 23:10:22
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4,330 for Friday the 7th of March 2025.
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Today's show is entitled Gimp Fixing Photos.
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It is part of the series Gimp.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 16 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is how to fix some of the common problems in photos.
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Hello, this is Ahukah, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio in another exciting episode
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in our Gimp series.
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It's been a while since we did this, but I always said that what I wanted to do was not
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just talk about Gimp in general terms, but to focus on fixing up some photos.
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And I've got some free time, so I thought this is a good time to dig into this.
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So this is going to be the first of what might be two, I don't know, episodes on fixing
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common problems with photos.
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Now I can only deal with the things that I have dealt with, so there may be other photo
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issues that I don't cover, because it just hasn't really happened to me.
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But what I want to do here is take a look at a few common issues that, you know, sometimes
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you just need to fix problems with a photo, or even a number of photos.
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Now in my case, I have a lot of photos from our various trips.
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Now according to Flickr, where I have a pro account, I have at the time of writing 13,000
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photos, and I don't plan to stop.
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Now managing all of this can get tricky.
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I generally start with DigiCam, which is my photo manager of choice.
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I tend to store my photos by date with each day being its own directory.
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So it's easy to load all of the photos from a given day in DigiCam, and from there I
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can click the preview button to see the photo in a larger size than the thumbnail.
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You can navigate from one to another using the arrow keys on your keyboard, or to jump
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around more, click the thumbnail button again, then select a photo, then click the preview
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button again.
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Once you've done this a few times, it becomes second nature.
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So that brings me to one of the first fixes I have had to do.
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And that is what I call fingers and photos.
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These days I take nearly all of my photos with my Android phone, because the quality
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is good enough that there is no need to do anything else.
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And I want to emphasize, I am not a professional photographer, or even an advanced photo hobbyist.
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I'm a guy that likes to travel and take vacation photos.
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So I'm not trying to do anything super fancy.
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And really these days my Android phone is pretty darn good.
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And it means I don't have to lug around any equipment, because I will always have my
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phone handy.
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But this does have one potential downfall, and that is an errant bit of a finger in the
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photo.
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Now I recently, as I'm recording this, came back from a month-long visit to France and
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had quite a few photos.
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Well, you know, you spend a whole month someplace that's going to happen.
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And some of them had this fault.
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And I've gotten, in general, pretty good about being conscious of getting my fingers out
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of the way.
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But when you're taking pictures with a cell phone, a smartphone, whatever, it's really easy
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to get just a little bit of the finger into the photo.
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And you know, that's not good.
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So I want to fix it.
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And it really, the way I do it is a simple fix.
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I just cut out the bad part.
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Now this starts with DigiCam, where I load up a directory of a day's photos and click
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the preview button and scroll through the photos one at a time.
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When I find one that has the errant finger, I check the file name of the photo, then
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open it in GIMP.
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The first dialog box I deal with is about changing the color scheme, and I always tell
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it to keep the original scheme and not convert it.
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I'm not trying to do anything major here to just cut out the finger.
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Now when the photo opens in GIMP, I select the crop tool, and I drag it to exclude the
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errant finger.
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In other words, the crop tool is used to select what I want to keep from the original
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photo, and that should be most of it.
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Generally the errant finger is at the top of the photo and covers no more than 5 or 6%
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of the vertical distance.
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When it's correctly selected, you hit the Enter key, and the part outside the crop will
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now disappear.
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Now I go to the File menu and find the option to overwrite the original file, and when
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I do this, a pop-up window appears and I click Export.
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The last step is to go back into DigiCam and click the Refresh option in the View menu,
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or pressing F5 will do the same thing.
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This will cause DigiCam to reread the file from the hard drive.
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I find the file I changed in the thumbnails, click the Preview, and make sure it is the
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way I want it.
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If it is, I can then resume scanning the photos using the arrow key until I find another
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one that I need to fix.
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Well what if you don't like to change and want another shot at it?
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Well at this point, if you have been following what I did, I have not yet discarded my work
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and Gimp.
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I can go back to Gimp and use Control Z to get back the original before my crop operation.
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I don't discard my work and Gimp until I'm ready to work on a new photo.
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Now of course you could also back up all of your originals into a separate archive before
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you start work, but this works well enough for me.
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When I get to the next photo, I start in Gimp by going to File and then Close to get rid
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of the previous photo, then open the new one and continue.
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So that's how I deal with the Errant Finger problem.
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Now another common one is Red Eye and I think we've all seen this in a few of our photos.
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It's when the pupils of the subject's eyes appear bright red, giving them a rather
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satanic appearance.
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The cause of this in short is light bouncing off the retina in the back of the eye, which
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is rich in blood vessels, hence the bright redness.
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This is generally observed in photos taken with a flash.
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Once the light hits the eye and bounces back faster than the pupil can adjust.
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But how do you get rid of it?
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There are a number of ways, but here are some fairly simple ways to do this.
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Now the first one is for low-res photos, and by low-res what I mean is when you zoom
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in you see very distinct pixels, you know, they become squares.
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So you load the photo and gimp, you zoom in, and you know, now you see the squares.
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Then what you do is you use the color selector to make sure your selected color is black,
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then select the paintbrush tool and reduce the size.
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If I can see individual pixels, I set the size to 1.
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This lets me operate on one pixel at a time.
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Now paint out the red eye color by clicking on the individual pixels.
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Now you'll probably click on each pixel several times, since it does not go to pure black
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right away, and this is good because it lets you blend the pixels a little better.
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Repeat for any other eyes in the photo that are red and export the finished photo when
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you were done.
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So that's for low-res photos, the ones that are really pixelated.
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But what about high-res photos?
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These days, actually most of the photos I take with my smartphone are fairly high resolution.
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And what that means is when I zoom in, I am not going to see individual pixels.
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It just zooms in.
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So for that, I use a slightly different approach.
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First load the photo and gimp, zoom in until the red spot is like three to four centimeters
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across.
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If this is a high-res photo, you should not see any discernible pixels.
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That's the whole point, because this is a different technique for a different situation.
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Then use the ellipse select tool to select the red area.
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Now go just a little beyond the red area to make sure there is no red unselected.
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If the eye is partially closed so that you don't have a fully round pupil, you should
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use the free select tool instead.
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And click around the area to make a dotted line that encloses it.
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Then go to Filters, Enhance, Red Eye Removal, and click OK.
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Now what you may find is that you've gotten rid of the red, but there's still some blue
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or white in the pupil.
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So if you want to adjust that, because that may look a little unnatural now, go to the
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Colors menu, select Colorize, and turn down the Lightness and Saturation until you get
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something that looks right to you.
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Now finally, I want to talk about photo artifacts.
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Now these can be caused in a number of ways.
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There could have been a speck of dust on the lens when you were trying to take the picture.
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Something may have happened to the negative.
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So you know, the picture is just there's something wrong here.
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Now I have a photo of my wife.
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It has a little white streak on her eyelid.
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Now that to me looks like damage to the negative.
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It's not that hard to fix something like that.
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So what you do is you first load the photo in Gimp, zoom in to the spot that needs to be
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fixed.
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Now go to Tools, Paint Tools, Heal.
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So the Heal tool is one of the paint tools, and that's the key to this.
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Now what does that do?
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This tool lets you grab pixels from a different part of the picture and paint them over an area.
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Now the key thing to keep in mind is that the pixels being grabbed are in relationship to
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what you are painting.
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So in this case, I'm looking at my wife's eyelid and there's this white streak.
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Well I'll just go a little bit to the right of the white streak and get the normal eyelid
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and click there.
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Now what's going to happen is that you select by holding down Control Click in the area
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you want to grab the pixels from.
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And then with just a regular paintbrush option, because this is the Heal is a paint tool.
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You can paint over the artifact, but as you do that, let's say you're moving your paint
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brush up, the area being grabbed from moves up as well.
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So if you started by grabbing pixels, let's say, you know, three centimeters to the right
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of where you are painting, as you paint the area being grabbed also moves the same way.
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So there's always three centimeters to the right of wherever you're painting.
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Now that can cause you to paint something you didn't intend.
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And if that happens, just release the tool and start again.
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Now as you're setting this up, make sure you have your tool option dialog open so you
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can control the brush size and things like that and set the brush size.
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I would suggest something like 15 to 20, but you can try different sizes to see how it
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works for you.
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Now you go to the area you want to grab pixels from and Control Click.
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Now you should see a dotted or dashed circle that is going to be, however many, you know,
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correspond to the brush size you selected.
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And so that's tells you what you're grabbing.
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Now if that's all pretty uniform in that area, you're fine.
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If there's variation, you might want to change the brush size so you're only picking up
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the part that you want.
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And then you just paint the area you want to heal.
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And you should see the pixels change as you paint over them.
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So for instance, this photo is my wife's eyelid, but the streak went into the eyebrow.
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So at a certain point, I had to stop painting where I was and now I want to grab from
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another part of the eyebrow to fix that.
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So you see what I mean about how you have to be careful about where you're grabbing
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and what you're painting over.
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Now remember, if at any point you say, oh, that was a mistake, Control Z will always get
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you back again.
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So you know, and the other thing is you can paint over something several different times
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until you get it the way you want it.
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So just go through this process until you have a picture you like.
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Now for a more detailed look at this, if you really want to dig into how to use the
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heal tool, I'm going to put a link in the show notes to a video from Davies Media that
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you might want to take a look at.
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And by the way, that photo of my wife now looks much better.
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I also corrected some red eye in the photo because photos often have several things to
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be corrected.
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Now with a little practice, you'll find you can use these tools quite easily to improve
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some of the issues in your photos.
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Now I'm going to do at least one more of these to address a couple of more issues that
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I have been running into with my photos.
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And one of them is about photos that are just too dark.
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You know, is there any way I can lighten it up?
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The other one has to do with old photos where the colors have gone wonky and that can
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happen.
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You know, I've got some photos that are 50 or 60 years old and the negatives may not
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have survived as well as they should have.
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So I'm going to do those.
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Anyway, for now, this is Ahuka for Hacker Public Radio signing off and is always encouraging
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you to support free software.
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Bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts, click on our contribute link to find out how
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easy it really is.
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The hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive
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and our sings.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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