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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#16 | ||
Eternal Patrol
![]() Join Date: May 2004
Location: Aeoteroa
Posts: 7,382
Downloads: 223
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With Gimp install its all about compile man, get your l33t skills out and compile that mother
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http://www.gimp.org/downloads/instal...html#comp-inst Quote:
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#17 |
Admiral
![]() Join Date: May 2003
Location: Midlands, UK
Posts: 2,139
Downloads: 22
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Another vote for Gimp here.
It's a little complicated to install as I recall - I went for a windows installer http://gimp-win.sourceforge.net/stable.html
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when you’ve been so long in the desert, any water, no matter how brackish, looks like life ![]() |
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#18 | |
Let's Sink Sumptin' !
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If you do pick up PS I would recommend one of those generic guide books, or the excellent Photoshop Wow! Book to help learn it with. As Chock mentioned the manuals Adobe puts out with it's products are daunting and dry. I found it easier just to pound buttons and see what worked.
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#19 |
Sea Lord
![]() Join Date: May 2005
Location: Under a thermal layer in chilly Olde England
Posts: 1,842
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![]() Re: versions of Photoshop.
Photoshop 4 is actually one of the best versions of PS believe it or not, and that's ancient, it has most of the useful features, although a minus point is that it is unstable on XP and probably hasn't got a prayer on Vista. You can get discounted new copies of Photoshop in a number of ways, very occasionally, an older version will be given away on a Magazine CD/DVD (i.e two or three versions older, and usually tied in with an offer to get a discount on the full latest version), Adobe do 'educational discounts' which come in two flavours (or flavors if you are American). First, anyone in further education can get a discount on any Adobe product, although this is actually quite small, but the plus side is that they do not care what further education you are in, as long as you can prove you are, so you could be at a night school class on car mechanics and still claim the discount. Then you have the full educational discount that is offered to educational establishments, this is a hefty percentage, and is for lecturers, teachers etc, so again, if you can collar a teacher or lecturer and get them to buy a copy on your behalf, you'll get a big discount (thirty percent the last time I checked). Things to watch out for: Photoshop CS (Creative Suite) is two versions back from current. It does not have the animation palette, so you have to switch to the (included) Image Ready application to do stuff like exporting to Flash as an animation file, although you can actually produce all the stuff for an animation in the CS version and then switch to Image ready. Photoshop CS2 adds the animation palette and some extra filters which are useful for retouching (notably the Vanishing Point filter, which will allow you to clone image areas in perspective). it also added the 'Smart Objects' feature, which enables you to continually resize stuff whilst retaining the original pixel data. CS2 also has better suppport for RAW image negatives, high dynamic range images, and has image stitching capabilities to allow you to create panoramic single images from several shots (the kind you see in virtual tours of U-Boats online, that sort of thing). Photoshop CS3 (the current version) is better optimised for Intel processors and adds a lot of networking and group operations capabilities, although it does actually lose some functionality where creating Flash files is concerned, since Adobe bought Aldus and got control of several web applications in the process and expect their customers to buy those apps too. The Vanishing Point tool got an overhaul in CS3 and the filters became 'non-destructive' although you can get around that in earlier versions by using duplicated layers and adjustment layers, so it's not as big a selling point as perhaps Adobe hoped it would be. Probably the most usable feature in the CS3 version is the smarter image adjustment tools and the new area select tool, which is rare addition to the (standard for years) set of selection tools in Photoshop and very useful if you have to work fast. there are a few other slightly useful features in CS3, such as the statistics palette (useful for remote group working and tracking in animation). All versions get better at colour profiling as they get newer, so if you envisage using Photoshop for print-ready artwork (say for the Submarine Almanac), then CS3 would be the wisest choice as it handles the latest North American prepress settings as well as the European ISO ones and will of course have a more up to date Pantone colour picker palette. With regard to learning Photoshop, unless you get some one on one training, probably the best way is to look online, as the vast majority of websites you find with tutorials are the most logical way to learn, in that you can generally see a picture with some effects on it it and think: 'That's what I want to do!', rather than say, searching through the help files and hoping to find the technical name for what you want to achieve. By this I mean, how would you actually know that you wanted to learn about, say, layered opacity masks, if you didn't know what layered opacity mask actually did? this is the problem with the official manuals and the help files, in that they often put the cart before the horse when it comes to learning. There are also quite a few video tutorials on sites like YouTube, but they are often at such a poor resolution that it is difficult to see what is actually being selected by the person doing the tutorial, you also have to keep in mind that there are very many ways to do the same thing in PS, and often you see tutorials on the 'net that will get you there, but not in the smartest or quickest way. This is what Adobe get snotty about when they make people like me take the Adobe Certified Expert exams, so that I am teaching it in the way they want it to be taught, which ironically enough, isn't always the smartest way! There are some tutorials on the Adobe website, but some of them do in fact have errors in them, as in fact do some of the help files in the program itsef (warning to anyone who has a bent copy of PS, if you have it running and go to the Adobe website, expect an unpleasant surprise through the mail, there is lots of security stuff like that in Photoshop, and if you don't believe me, try scanning a banknote and opening the image in PS!) Wow that was a long post - Help! I'm turning into Skybird! ![]()
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![]() Last edited by Chock; 12-05-07 at 09:45 PM. |
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#20 |
The Old Man
![]() Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Canada
Posts: 1,448
Downloads: 10
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Another vote for Photoshop here. I used the basic features for a long time to doodle or make designs for websites or whatever. There are a wealth of bells and whistles, and you can steer clear of them, but when you need them they're there. When I started getting serious about photography I really opened up and started exploring the rest of the program i.e. raw manipulation, channels, levels, etc. It's great!
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#21 |
Soaring
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Unbeatable prices.
http://search.ebay.com/Paint-Shop-Pr...Zm37QQfromZR40 1 patch required for version 9.
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#22 |
Stowaway
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If your looking for something free, I'd vote for Gimp as well. You might also try Paint.net. I experimented with it and it seems pretty powerful.
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#23 | |
Born to Run Silent
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![]() Ah, well, maybe I need to keep working with it and learn how to use it. ![]() I've got a graphic that needs a little touch up work, anyone want to take a crack at it? Pretty simple, it's a ship hull and I removed the Wolfpack League logo, but I can't smudge or smooth the part where the logo was... I'm so lame. If you want to try, I can send it to you. thanks Neal the gimpy artist
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#24 | |
Born to Run Silent
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#25 |
Sea Lord
![]() Join Date: May 2005
Location: Under a thermal layer in chilly Olde England
Posts: 1,842
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You can fire your problem graphic to me if you want me to have a crack at sorting it Neal. Stick it on an email if you like.
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#26 |
Lucky Jack
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Should be rather easy job with the clone stamp tool.
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#27 |
Born to Run Silent
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ok, sweet. PM sent, thanks
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#28 |
Sea Lord
![]() Join Date: May 2005
Location: Under a thermal layer in chilly Olde England
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Neal check your mail, mission accomplished.
Incidentally, I think your difficulties in making the correction were probably because the png file was in 'indexed colour' (which is where the palette of colours is limited to a specific range of tones, usually 256), needless to say this makes it difficult to make subtle corrections to things, so if whatever image editing program you are using can switch modes to RGB, it will be easier for you to do this kind of malarkey. Then, when you are done, you can put it back into indexed colour mode if need be. But be aware that this is not like flipping a switch however, and you do lose some quality if you flip modes like that a lot. ![]()
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#29 | |
Born to Run Silent
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Ok, thanks, the touch up looks very, very nice. I'll check into the indexed color aspect and see if I can learn it. Neal
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#30 |
Born to Run Silent
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Digging up an old thread... I think I found my problem with Image Composer and dark colors... I happened to see
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