:D
ace!
EDIT: You do these black and white pics to colour frightengly well, tutorial please.
( ,
Sun 31 Jan 2010, 22:32,
archived)
EDIT: You do these black and white pics to colour frightengly well, tutorial please.
Thanks. Q&D
I should really detail out the pattern on the skirt,
but that takes ten shitloads of time to do well.
edit:
There is usually at least one recoloring tutorial on most
photoshoping hints sites. My method is rather blunt and
direct. Mostly, it is knowing what colours work. That is
more about practice and colour theory than how-to.
E2: An overly complex method, but covers the basic idea.
www.biorust.com/tutorials/detail/273/en/
( ,
Sun 31 Jan 2010, 22:35,
archived)
but that takes ten shitloads of time to do well.
edit:
There is usually at least one recoloring tutorial on most
photoshoping hints sites. My method is rather blunt and
direct. Mostly, it is knowing what colours work. That is
more about practice and colour theory than how-to.
E2: An overly complex method, but covers the basic idea.
www.biorust.com/tutorials/detail/273/en/
for balance i should point out that paintshop has
an overlay option for layers that lets you pick colour as the overley type, then lets you pick a percentage. however the output quality is probably not as good.
edit : in hindsight I would have not said this infact I would have not said anything
( ,
Sun 31 Jan 2010, 23:05,
archived)
edit : in hindsight I would have not said this infact I would have not said anything
"Overlay" is not as useful as "hue" or "color" (in my opinion).
I use color layers mostly. And paint in parts on their own layer,
so I can adjust opacity or rotate the hue if it starts to get muddy.
Some folks set the brush to color or hue mode and paint right
on top of the original. I like being able to copy and reorder the
layers when I've not thought thru the whole thing, which you
can't do if you overpaint on the original. Don't use Paintshop
myself so I'm not sure which way would work best there.
edit: Bah! Info is info.
( ,
Sun 31 Jan 2010, 23:14,
archived)
so I can adjust opacity or rotate the hue if it starts to get muddy.
Some folks set the brush to color or hue mode and paint right
on top of the original. I like being able to copy and reorder the
layers when I've not thought thru the whole thing, which you
can't do if you overpaint on the original. Don't use Paintshop
myself so I'm not sure which way would work best there.
edit: Bah! Info is info.