![]() |
| The Slide, as scanned |
![]() |
| The slide, with some manual correction of the colour cast |
![]() |
| Side, split into Red, Green and Cyan elements. I don't recall which this was. |
![]() |
| The manually corrected slide, passed to an online AI service, and told to "Sort IT" tho with more guidance. Impressive |
So at this year's SlideFest (What? You weren't there?) one common question was on how much I edit the slides. Normally, as little as possible. A little correction of contrast levels, or a little straightening. Usually a little cropping (for ....reasons), but nothing dramatic.
But, some old slides, particularly Ektachrome / E6 process slides, can develop a severe colour-cast. And the results can be Yeuch. So, I sometimes correct them, or just extra a single colour element, and use them as monochrome slides.
But today, I thought I'd show you before and after, and illustrate what Artificial Intelligence can do.




No comments:
Post a Comment