ON1 doesn't have an "intersect" concept. In ON1, I'd start as I did here with a color range mask. Reduce the range as much as you can so the mask is covering the halo (a little bleed is OK). Then use your other tools (brush, chisel, etc.) to remove areas of the mask you don't want. The chiseling would be the last step, refine the edge of the halo as needed.
Hi Scott good video. As a ON 1 user could this be accomplished using the chisel brush? I never learned LightRoom.
ON1 doesn't have an "intersect" concept. In ON1, I'd start as I did here with a color range mask. Reduce the range as much as you can so the mask is covering the halo (a little bleed is OK). Then use your other tools (brush, chisel, etc.) to remove areas of the mask you don't want. The chiseling would be the last step, refine the edge of the halo as needed.
@@ScottDavenport Thanks
Good - but most of all halos in Lightroom are WHITE, how could I remove those?
Try a luminance range mask instead of a color mask. In the video description, there's a link to another tutorial I did with a black & white photo.