I'm going to agree with this one. It makes a lot of sense to first
desaturation with monochrome and then do split-toning. It's much easier
to feel out what the end result will be in this order.
Jason
On 2020-03-16 6:24 a.m., Pascal Obry wrote:
> Le lundi 16 mars 2020 à 08:43 +, simon brown a
Le lundi 16 mars 2020 à 08:43 +, simon brown a écrit :
> Understood. I can indeed solve the issue by reordering the modules.
>
> I would argue though that if monochrome (and perhaps any of the
> saturation sliders) doesn't actually desaturate the image then it's
> going to confuse a lot of u
Understood. I can indeed solve the issue by reordering the modules.
I would argue though that if monochrome (and perhaps any of the saturation
sliders) doesn't actually desaturate the image then it's going to confuse a
lot of users. I think the desaturate process is a fairly well understood,
expe
Others have already answered about the module ordering.
But to me this issue is in what you want to do. A simple way can be to
use less saturated colors in split-toning. The other solution is to
lesser the fusion of the split toning module.
Regards,
--
Pascal Obry / Magny Les Hameaux (78)
On Sun, Mar 15, 2020, at 07:21, simon brown wrote:
>
> I've found that it is not possible to properly desaturate an image
> after split toning has been applied, is this correct behaviour?
It's the behavior with the default module ordering, and an example of a case
where you might want to chan