>>3303708Yeah, I can see what you're saying. I think the bulk of the issue is the discolouring of the plywood and the fence post. Shifting the colour of the shingles, bark and siding isn't as big of an issue; but wood products tend to have a specific brownish colour. There is also a distinct teal tinge added to the sky that probably reinforces the appearance of a green tint over the entire image.
[pic related] attempts to fix those issues as well as consolidating the barks colour away from a mix of red and yellow and towards just a browned yellow. I have to say that the tree's bark is really eye catching; a very nice choice on your part.
I managed to keep the green off of the post and the buildings by S curving the image's blues like before and then duplicating the image, masking the duplicate to be just the buildings and the post, and then fiddling with that duplicate's colours until the wood products were brown again. That said, this wasn't my first try at fixing it so it ended up a little discoloured (from multiple applications of different processes). I also hued the images teals towards blue and then desaturated the blues and teals to take the green out of the sky.
I wouldn't call this a final edit, but I'm getting close IMO. If I do another I want to cut down the number of processes used in total. You can't see it very much in [pic related], but the higher res image ended up with a lot of processing artifacts.
If I do a final edit I'll post a step by step, but I wont waste my time typing it now. This one was full of finicky little edits and I forget half of them anyways. The big changes from the first though where polarizing the image's colours between yellow/green and blue by hueing the sky from teal to blue and the bark from red to yellow, and removing a little green from the church and the fence post. Everything else was roughly the same.
I'm not happy with how much red ended up in the building's siding though, before someone brings it up, lol.