I agree with CostaMesa and would have used the TAT tool. But.....that is a global adjustment. If there were any other purple or magenta hues in the image those would have been desaturated as well, which is something you might not want to do. I think I would have used an Adjusment Brush on the area and dragged the saturation slider down so that it only adjusts the selected area. Any thoughts on this option?
I'll assume you'll want to use PS to prepare for printing and if you are seeing any levels of magenta or purple still bothering you there, depending on the color space, you'll target that with Adjustments, Color Balance sliders as well.
Rich - Yes, it would certainly be possible to apply additional adjustments in Photoshop when preparing the image for print, though in this case the photo didn't have an extreme color gamut and printed perfectly well. The rest of the process can be seen in the GreyLearning video training library.
I agree with CostaMesa and would have used the TAT tool. But.....that is a global adjustment. If there were any other purple or magenta hues in the image those would have been desaturated as well, which is something you might not want to do.
I think I would have used an Adjusment Brush on the area and dragged the saturation slider down so that it only adjusts the selected area.
Any thoughts on this option?
I'll assume you'll want to use PS to prepare for printing and if you are seeing any levels of magenta or purple still bothering you there, depending on the color space, you'll target that with Adjustments, Color Balance sliders as well.
Rich - Yes, it would certainly be possible to apply additional adjustments in Photoshop when preparing the image for print, though in this case the photo didn't have an extreme color gamut and printed perfectly well. The rest of the process can be seen in the GreyLearning video training library.