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11/08/2005 10:17:17 PM · #1 |
Can you use Sepia or Warming Filters...or a combo of the two in Basic? |
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11/08/2005 10:32:13 PM · #2 |
I'm pretty sure it reads no filters except for gaussian blur and noise removal. You could introduce sepia tones with hue/sat, levels, selective color, or duo/tri tones. As long as it's only adjustment layers and applied to whole image.
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11/08/2005 10:33:49 PM · #3 |
Originally posted by taterbug: I'm pretty sure it reads no filters except for gaussian blur and noise removal. You could introduce sepia tones with hue/sat, levels, selective color, or duo/tri tones. As long as it's only adjustment layers and applied to whole image. |
YES, everything was applied to the whole image....nothing selective. |
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11/08/2005 10:40:56 PM · #4 |
Yep, just remember, no filters :-)
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11/08/2005 10:58:02 PM · #5 |
So how does Joey do it? Hmmmmm.... the great mystery it is :) |
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11/08/2005 11:06:21 PM · #6 |
I seem to see many tinted entries ....a little confused here myself.
SC Pleeeeaaaase respond. |
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11/08/2005 11:06:48 PM · #7 |
How about invert of colours? |
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11/08/2005 11:11:06 PM · #8 |
This the Pride Challenge winner and I believe it's a sepia filter???
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11/08/2005 11:14:25 PM · #9 |
Are we talking PS filters, or on the camera filters?
As far as I know, on camera filters are legal. |
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11/08/2005 11:15:34 PM · #10 |
There is much confusion of the tem "filter" as different software programs use the term differently.
Under Basic Rules:
Glass filter in front of lens: OK
Color "filter" adjustment to change colors only: OK
Effects filter which moves pixels (e.g. "Watercolor" or radial blur): NOT OK -- except for those listed (Sharpen, blur, noise, noise-reduction, dust&scratches) in the rules. |
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11/08/2005 11:21:46 PM · #11 |
So sepia, cooling blue, warming filter(81), magenta, green etc are ok?
I thought I might be staring at a big fat DQ. Phew!
Thanks
Message edited by author 2005-11-08 23:22:09. |
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11/08/2005 11:54:54 PM · #12 |
Aw, I'm sorry man, from your thread title I thought you were talking about photo shop filters...
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11/08/2005 11:58:19 PM · #13 |
Yeah, filters on the camera are just fine. But filters in Photoshop aren't allowed in basic challenges, except gaussian blur and noise removal filters.
However, you don't need filters to get a good sepia tone or to shift your colors slightly. You can use, for example, Variations, select "More Yellow" and then "More Red" and you'll get a sepia that you can later adjust in Hue/Saturation.
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11/09/2005 12:13:38 AM · #14 |
I think what might be causing confusion is that in photoshop, there are some "filters" that aren't in the Filter menu. If you go to Image/Adjustments, there is an option called "Photo Filter...", this provides a number of simulated neutral density color photographic filters, i.e. "Warming Filter (81)". They're pretty much all things you could buy as a real screw on, just simulated in photoshop. Are these considered filters, as filters are described in Basic Editing? They are applied uniformly and don't move pixels. |
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11/09/2005 12:18:34 AM · #15 |
Thanks gang. I got the OK from the SC. Good to go. |
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11/09/2005 01:03:02 AM · #16 |
Originally posted by kearock: If you go to Image/Adjustments, there is an option called "Photo Filter..." ...Are these considered filters, as filters are described in Basic Editing? |
Those are overall color adjustments. They're fine in Basic.
Message edited by author 2005-11-09 01:03:33. |
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