Posted by
ali ayata on
May 11, 2011; 1:31pm
URL: http://imagej.273.s1.nabble.com/Measuring-of-sponge-spicule-microscopy-images-tp3684624p3684628.html
hi.
you can do this with photoshop #color replacement tool.
try this;
http://www.digital-photography-school.com/changing-color-in-photoshopij de de mutlaka bunu yapmanın bir yolu vardır ama en kolayı bu bence.
--- On Wed, 5/11/11, Ayse Turak <
[hidden email]> wrote:
From: Ayse Turak <
[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: Colorizing of binary images
To:
[hidden email]
Date: Wednesday, May 11, 2011, 5:52 AM
Dear Arne,
thanks for that -- my one problem is that no matter what I choose, black areas become coloured, but the areas that were once white now turn black (or coloured if I invert the image). Is there a way to have all the black pixels red for example, but keep the white pixels white?
sorry if this seems basic, I tried every variation of the LUT but none of them seem to work for me
regards
Ayse
On May 4, 2011, at 19:45 , Seitz Arne wrote:
> Hi Ayse,
>
> the easiest way to change the appearance of your (binary) image is to use Lookup tables (LUT).
> You can find them under: Image->Lookup Tables.
>
> Best regards
> Arne
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: ImageJ Interest Group [mailto:
[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Ayse Turak
> Sent: mardi 3 mai 2011 16:18
> To:
[hidden email]
> Subject: Colorizing of binary images
>
> Dear Members,
>
> I am new to imagej and I was wondering if there was a way to colorize binary images -- either converting back into a psuedo-RGB image or to assign a different color value to the black portions, i.e. making all red
>
> any advice would be great
>
> Ayse
>
Dr. Ayse Turak <
[hidden email]>
Visiting Assistant Professor
Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences
Sabanci University
Orhanli, Tuzla
34956 Istanbul, TURKEY
+90 216 483 9000 2126