In other words, a file full of flaws
In cases like this, I notice that there are some shadow areas that are more critical, grainy, and show more noise and color shift.
Like the area highlighted by the circle in the example below.
I imagine this happens when Color Perfect sets its base curve.
From this point on, it's up to our workflow to adjust all the image values to make it "perfect."
I find these critical shadow areas problematic.
Even when the image seems well-adjusted across all its values, these areas remain incorrect.
The only way I've found to make them a neutral gray shadow color is to use the Gamma tool.
Obviously, this then involves modifying all the other tools previously adjusted.
But okay, that's beside the point. It's not important to have more or less black, or graduated white, after using Gamma.
My impression, however, is that using the Gamma tool to overcome this problem isn't the most correct approach.
Because, whether or not you use Gamma changes the image radically. Obviously, its density and brightness change, but the color also tends to gray, as in the critical shadow area, which, however, is corrected this way.
I understand that it's normal for darkening with Gamma to cause all these changes, but I don't know what else to do to solve the problem.
This, by the way, happens to me mostly with sea images. Much less, if at all, with other types of images.
