On 01/31/2011 03:00 PM, Rob Antonishen wrote: > Try this- > > After you have a rough sketch, create a new layer filled with Hue: 200 > Saturation: 60 Lightness 75 below your sketch layer and set your > sketch layer blend mode to screen. Your image will now look like it > is drawn in non photo blue. I must be misunderstanding you. When you say to fill the layer with Hue: 200, Saturation: 60, Lightness: 75, I must not be doing what you want me to do. The closest I can figure to fill the layer is to fill it with a color HSV 200, 60, 75. Then if I make the layer blend mode of my sketch above it screen, my sketch disappears, although of course it comes back after I set the mode back to normal. > Create a new white layer on top and set the mode to multiply and > sketch over using black. > > When happy with that layer, change its mode to screen and move the > blue layer below it. > > Repeat and rinse. > > -Rob A> > > On Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 5:06 PM, Patrick Horgan<phorg...@yahoo.com> wrote: >> I'm reading "The DC Comics Guide to DIGITALLY DRAWING Comics" by Freddie >> E Williams II. In it he talks about a workflow where he does a rough >> sketch, puts an adjustment layer over it with Hue: 200 Saturation: 60 >> Lightness+75, that makes the underlying rough sketch look like a >> non-photo blue pencil sketch. Then he refines the drawing, pops another >> adjustment layer over it, and continues the process until he's happy. >> Older versions get progressively pushed into the background in a >> non-destructive way, although when he gets to the version he's happy >> with he can delete all of the intermediate ones. They're just steps in >> the process. >> >> Now GIMP doesn't have adjustment layers and although they're a >> frequently requested thing, unless someone with time and expertise steps >> up to do the development, the current team has their hands full with >> other priorities for quite some time. The move to gegl is more >> important, and I'm sure would make this easier to implement. So, I'm >> not holding my breath. >> >> What I'm looking for is a substitute. Preferably a non-destructive >> one. I can turn down the opacity of layers gradually as they recede >> into the drawing past, but that's annoying. Alternatively, there's the >> Hue Saturation Lightness tool, but I have no idea how to reproduce those >> settings. The numbers on that tool (assuming the master is chosen) have >> no relationship to the numbers used in PS. >> >> The Colorize tool seems more hopeful, you can enter those numbers into >> the tool and it looks similar to what you want. Of course it doesn't >> affect any but that layer, so stacking them to progressively decrease >> the visibility of the underlying older versions doesn't help. You'd >> still have to go into each of the older layers and manually decrease >> their opacity. >> >> Anyone have any better ideas? >> >> Patrick >> _______________________________________________ >> Gimp-user mailing list >> Gimp-user@lists.XCF.Berkeley.EDU >> https://lists.XCF.Berkeley.EDU/mailman/listinfo/gimp-user >>
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