Hi,
I want to try to add saturation and red hue to some of my scenery textures, as I feel they are way too washed out and green hued.
I tried Irfanview, but it doesn't seem to output .dds, even though it can add saturation and hues in other formats.
Is there a batch converter that will do this?
DDS batch conversion tool?
DDS batch conversion tool?
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Re: DDS batch conversion tool?
GIMP should do what you need. It supports .dds correctly out of the box, and also supports macros.
Re: DDS batch conversion tool?
Bonjour,
J'utilise Photoshop pour ce genre de boulot.
J'utilise Photoshop pour ce genre de boulot.
Re: DDS batch conversion tool?
Any photo editing app should be able to accomplish this - including GIMP and Photoshop... however, I am not sure color correction is something you would want to automate.
Photoshop has several "auto" adjustments, including "Auto Tone", "Auto Contrast" and "Auto Color" - however, in my experience they don't work as well as getting your hands dirty and tweaking color values by hand.
I usually have my base image on a layer and then add a Brightness / Contrast adjustment layer, a Color Balance adjustment layer, and a Curves adjustment layer. The adjustment layers are simply controls that let you make adjustments in a non-destructive manner.
I would say, give the "Auto" adjustments in Photoshop a try - yo might be happy with the results. But if you want all of your tiles to be consistent, you will probably have to spend quite a bit of time manually editing each tile.
With the aerial imagery I used, there were tiles which were taken at different time periods and maybe even different camera than other tiles, and trying to get everything color corrected was a nightmare.
Good luck!
Photoshop has several "auto" adjustments, including "Auto Tone", "Auto Contrast" and "Auto Color" - however, in my experience they don't work as well as getting your hands dirty and tweaking color values by hand.
I usually have my base image on a layer and then add a Brightness / Contrast adjustment layer, a Color Balance adjustment layer, and a Curves adjustment layer. The adjustment layers are simply controls that let you make adjustments in a non-destructive manner.
I would say, give the "Auto" adjustments in Photoshop a try - yo might be happy with the results. But if you want all of your tiles to be consistent, you will probably have to spend quite a bit of time manually editing each tile.
With the aerial imagery I used, there were tiles which were taken at different time periods and maybe even different camera than other tiles, and trying to get everything color corrected was a nightmare.
Good luck!