*** From the Archives ***

This article is from June 1, 2009, and is no longer current.

Give Photos Amazing Depth and Tonal Quality

George DeWolfe, renowned black and white and landscape photographer, proudly presents PercepTool, a software plugin for Photoshop CS3 and CS4, that duplicates the percept of the human brain from a 2D image. Unlike other HDR software, PercepTool takes the luminance image formed by the camera and adds special high-level algorithms that mimic what happens in the visual section of the brain. The image is transformed from a flat image to one that has amazing depth, tonal quality, and presence.
30 years in the experimental stage and 3 years in development, the PercpTool is like no other plugin or technique in Photoshop. No Photoshop tool can render an image like PercepTool. Began as an experiment from a challenge by Dr. Edwin Land, the inventor of Polaroid, DeWolfe and Chris Russ invented the plugin to change the image received from the camera to one that we actually see in our brain. Research in recent lightness perception science and visual cortex biology drove the main thrust of the development.
PercepTool takes the image made in the digital camera sensor (also called luminance image) and changes it into what our brain actually perceives. The luminance image consists of 2 sub (intrinsic) images: reflection and illumination. The reflection and illumination images are separated from the luminance image in the visual cortex of the brain, processed and recombined into what is known as the percept, or the image that we actually perceive. We call this image luminosity. Most of the changes are due to differential recombination of the edges in the image and optimization of tonal values.
Available now for both Windows and Mac platforms, PercepTool is also a companion software to George DeWolfe’s new book, B&W Printing: Creating The Digital Master Print, published by Lark Books and available on Amazon.com (see left).
Purchase the PercepTool at www.georgedewolfe.com for $89.95.

  • Anonymous says:

    According to the web site it is not available for Windows yet.

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