“Iris_scratch: Quick Fixes for a Scratched Iris in Photos” — Concise guide
Overview
- “Iris_scratch” refers to a visible streak, artifact, or scratch-like defect appearing over the iris area in a photo (often from sensor dust, lens flare, compression artifacts, retouching errors, or accidental brush strokes during editing).
Quick fixes (in order)
- Spot-healing or clone stamp (small discrete scratches)
- Use a small soft brush, sample nearby iris texture and color, clone or heal along the scratch, preserving radial iris pattern.
- Frequency separation (for texture vs. color)
- Separate texture and color layers; fix color/band artifacts on the low-frequency layer and reconstruct fine iris fibers on the high-frequency layer.
- Liquify + healing (distorted streaks)
- Slightly nudge radial fibers with a low-strength forward warp, then heal to blend.
- Dodge & burn + blur (soft edges)
- Soften sharp scratch edges with a tiny blur, then dodge/burn to match highlights and shadows.
- Repaint with texture brush (large or complex damage)
- Sample multiple iris photos or nearby areas to create a brush that mimics radial striations; paint on a new layer and mask to blend.
- Replace the iris (last resort)
- Extract a clean iris from another image with matching lighting/angle; color-match, warp to fit, and blend using luminosity masks.
Tips to keep it natural
- Work non-destructively on separate layers and use masks.
- Preserve the radial structure: always clone/paint following iris fibers.
- Match specular highlights and catchlights; losing them makes edits obvious.
- Use subtle grain/noise to integrate the repair.
- Zoom out regularly to check realism at viewing size.
Suggested tool settings
- Healing/Clone: brush hardness 0–30%, opacity 60–100% depending on need.
- Liquify: pressure 5–15%, brush size slightly larger than the area.
- Blur: radius 0.5–2 px (at typical high-res photo).
- Frequency separation: low/ high split around 8–15 px depending on resolution.
When to stop and seek help
- If iris geometry or catchlight is lost, or if edits look plastic at normal viewing sizes, consider asking a retoucher or using a reference image.
Leave a Reply