Does DAZ Studio have a quick way to increase saturation?

FlortaleFlortale Posts: 611

In Poser, there was an HSV node, allowing you to change the saturation of the image very quickly by playing with a dial, does DAZ Studio have a means of changing the saturation of an image map on the fly?  I could do it in photoshop, but sometimes all I need is a small adjustment.

Post edited by Flortale on

Comments

  • fastbike1fastbike1 Posts: 4,078
    edited March 2020

    Tonemapping has a Saturation setting. You might looking through the Render Settings options enlightening.

    Post edited by fastbike1 on
  • FlortaleFlortale Posts: 611
    fastbike1 said:

    Tonemapping has a Saturation setting. You might looking through the Render Settings options enlightening.

    This is great.  Would be even better if it work by figure, not just the whole scene.  This at least gives me a sense of how much saturation I need to add via photoshop.  It saves a lot of time to get the right sat via this tone mapping. Thanks!

  • nonesuch00nonesuch00 Posts: 18,293
    Flortale said:
    fastbike1 said:

    Tonemapping has a Saturation setting. You might looking through the Render Settings options enlightening.

    This is great.  Would be even better if it work by figure, not just the whole scene.  This at least gives me a sense of how much saturation I need to add via photoshop.  It saves a lot of time to get the right sat via this tone mapping. Thanks!

    You could composite although modern versions of Photoshop Elements make it easy to do what you are talking about. 

  • FlortaleFlortale Posts: 611
    Flortale said:
    fastbike1 said:

    Tonemapping has a Saturation setting. You might looking through the Render Settings options enlightening.

    This is great.  Would be even better if it work by figure, not just the whole scene.  This at least gives me a sense of how much saturation I need to add via photoshop.  It saves a lot of time to get the right sat via this tone mapping. Thanks!

    You could composite although modern versions of Photoshop Elements make it easy to do what you are talking about. 

    Can you give me some more insight into this? Jsut enough to get my foot in the door. By composite, do you mean rendering the figure as a separate layer in DAZ, then altering that layer in photoshop element?

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