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| Author | Message |
Alienboy
6 posts |
#8819 2006-11-04 18:23 GMT |
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I was messing around with CS2 and I came across the color replacement tool. I know How did I not know about this, truth is I use to be a person that didnt like to really try new stuff on the comp since last time i didnt i screwed it up big time but anyways I was trying it out and its pretty sweet but i was wondering is there a way to make the colors darker than. ex. I try to change the color of a yellow car to a dark red and it comes out as a light pinkish color. I try to change the color to white and it comes out as this greyish color. Does anyone know how to fix this or am I missing the real reason this tool is used. I noticed that it fits the shapes of everything and gets darker or lighter with light but is there a way to make it the actual color you want and still have those effects happen?
Here is what someone else that I know did...they found a pic did the same thing as I did and got a different result...His is on the left Mine is on the right ![]() Here is another example of what I was trying to do With the plain old red color ![]() And than I tried it on Woody but with a bright Green ![]() He came out perfectly fine just the way I wanted it. Soooo what is your theroy on why I can not get the right colors expect for the bright green on woody? Please help I really like this tool and would love it if it would work right for me |
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Lombi
Administrators
1977 posts |
#8824 2006-11-05 16:44 GMT |
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Actually for effects like these you can most easily use some sort of combination of color range and hue & saturation. You will create much faster and accurate details that way
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Siggie!
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Alienboy
6 posts |
#8826 2006-11-05 21:30 GMT |
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<!--quoteo(post=8824:date=Nov 5 2006, 04:44 PM:name=Lombi)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Lombi @ Nov 5 2006, 04:44 PM) [snapback]8824[/snapback]</div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec-->
Actually for effects like these you can most easily use some sort of combination of color range and hue & saturation. You will create much faster and accurate details that way REALLY? and how would I do this or is there a tutorial around that I can follow? |
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spllogics
316 posts |
#8828 2006-11-06 09:51 GMT |
Lombi
Administrators
1977 posts |
#8829 2006-11-06 10:49 GMT |
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Agree with spllogics, but I can make one for you if you like.
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Siggie!
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Alienboy
6 posts |
#8830 2006-11-06 16:51 GMT |
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<!--quoteo(post=8829:date=Nov 6 2006, 10:49 AM:name=Lombi)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Lombi @ Nov 6 2006, 10:49 AM) [snapback]8829[/snapback]</div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec-->
Agree with spllogics, but I can make one for you if you like. if u could do a simple one that wont take up alot of ur time...Im really not good with searching for things, and since im new to it I dont know what to really put into the search. Thanks for the help tho I appreciate it alot |
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pinkbellycat
157 posts |
#9380 2007-04-22 10:09 GMT |
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This has been an interesting thread, learned something I did not know. I too would be interested in learning the quickest way to achieve this type of change in photoshop. I think that when someone who uses the program completes the tutorial on it that we are all better off. thanks
Are you going to post a link to the tutorial here so we can all take a look? |
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Jeff
514 posts |
#9394 2007-04-24 04:52 GMT |
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The way that I always went about this is just simply cutting and extracting things that I wanted to change from the picture to a new layer.
Then would adjust the Hue (Ctrl + U) and change the color saturation and lightness using that. It's quick and simple. You can even give it more of a defined look by taking an extra layer and putting it below the above new color layer. De saturating it so you have a black and white copy. Then on the new color layer mess with the blending modes... Multiply gives a vectorish look usually and Overlay will give it more of a glossy look depending on what you are doing and how much black there is. I did all that from just memory so if it works pat me on the back. |
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Working on two big projects right now. Get hyped or not. It doesn't matter. Ha.
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