A lot of this you can do with adjustment layers if you wanted. But the above
would be my quick and dirty method. Your milage and taste may very.
Robert
Open your image, go image>adjustments>match colour.
Do not play with the colours...........simply put a check in the "neutralize" box.........that may be all you need to do.
Start with adding some green.
Rob
Yes there's a Cyan cast, but therer's also a Blue cast.
Add a Levels Adjustment Layer. In the Adjustment dialog, go to the Red channel, and drag the middle slider slightly to the left. Go to the Blue channel, and drag the middle slider a little further to the right.
That is what I do as I bring the old scanned pictures/negatives/slides into the computer.
Bill, who has no connection with the company, any software store, etc. unless it is hidden in my 4 something or other "retirement" thing.
After that use Curves to set reasonable values for known highlight, shadow and midtone points. This image has all three. The image will start coming into line very quickly. This is color correction 101 really.
To take it step further, convert a copy to Lab and do a Curves "a" and "b" channel move to get the fleshtones nice and rich, and while your at it, you might take advantage of Lab's steeper gamma curve to pull a tad more shadow detail with H/S.
Convert back to RGB, drag on top of your original corrected RGB and decide how much of the Lab correction to blend in.