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is photoshop able to measure color separate parameters like value, chroma and hue? like on the image below:
John is *EXACTLY* right, and this is why, a month or so ago, I questioned your overall goal as well as the approach you have chosen. If you were still in school, I could understand why you might be doing such a project (eg, for a class or a thesis), but you replied that you have been in practice for 8 years. You should have more than enough revenue from your practice to purchase any of the clinically validated and widely accepted commercial software and write it off as a business expense instead of attempting to do it yourself....However, simple answers to relatively straightforward questions does not solve what looks like a pretty major software development program if you are trying to duplicate the capabilities of an already existing product. Photoshop is a very powerful program yet that does not equate to Photoshop being a good software base from which to build a product. Just my opinion of course.
1)i understand the need to use the Lab colors, thanks. so i need to find the shortest distance on the chart between my tooth sample and shades (a1,a2,a3,etc...).but should i use 3-D (include Luminosity) or 2-D with only a,b coordinates?
2)here is my current excel after recent update with 3-d coordinates that finds the closest color (delta E). am i doing it right now? this is the formula i'm using to measure the distance: https://www.easycalculation.com/analytical/learn-distance3.php
http://www.dentopolis.org/temp/ShadeMatch.xlsx
3)does it matter if photoshop can't divide colors into Value, Hue and Chroma as numbers?
4)this is my real life case.i made a selection for tooth parts, filter-average, color picker and pasted Lab values into excel. but it tells me that all those parts are A4 shade! it should display some dark color at the tooth neck and light color at the edge. strange. Lab values are very close to each other (very small range).
Thanks for the courtesy, John, but, I'm going to bow out of this discussion.Hi Tom
Since Ninanoki asked you specifically on this question, I will leave this one to you.
John Wheeler
i don't know if i'm doing it right in excel with L,a,b and a,b ...i can see a little difference between Lab and ab in the middle and bite section of the tooth. but i think that even right now excel confirms the right way i made photoshop analysis. any ideas how to make it better?
what's not good is that in ps colors overlay each other when the tolerance is too high in color range selection.
do you think that some proportion in excel could mix color to say that for example i should take 70% B2 and 30& C2 to achieve minimum delta E?
if you use a PS tool that uses the tolerance option, it has inherent limitations as such a tool selects on an RGB math equation that do not exactly reflect what you see with you eyes (e.g. it is color data based not luminosity based. That means the blue component of RGB in selecting an area gets too much weight.
thanks for everything. am i allowed to open a new thread to discuss the most accurate color selection method in photoshop for L,a,b?