![]() ![]() Of course, this is not so attractive in the city it will work well at the facilities. ![]() Go back to the target document and apply the Match Color (Image > Adjustments > Match Color) command. Go to the source image and make an accurate selection of colors that you want to apply to the target image. Let’s try it out! Take the Magic Wand Tool (W) and make a selection of anything you want to apply whose colors. You can also limit the scope and before applying, create a selection of the desired color and selection of an object in the final document. If you think, what Save/Load Statistics do – it’s just saving/load the settings of applied filter like presets. At the same time affects the tonal volumes, exposure, and saturation in the main image. “Match Color” is designed for color, but it also has several settings that will help you adjust the color overlay. In the image below you can get acquainted with each function and see how it affects the image. You must specify from the Source menu the opened document from whose colors you’ll be matching in the target image. As sources can be not only the entire document but also any layer of that document. In the window that appears, settings and the ability to specify sources will be presented. Go on to Image > Adjustments > Match Color. Go to the document with the image to which you want to apply color and duplicate Background Layer (Layer > Duplicate Layer or use shortcut Cmd/Ctrl + J). I open (File > Open or use shortcut Cmd/Ctrl + O) images “mur-847019” as a source of the color and “hong-kong-1990268” like target image to where I apply color.
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