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05/03/2006 02:50:31 AM · #1 |
I noticed that "Serenity" by owen had a "Selective Colour
Invert" adjustment. Pardon my ignorance, but is this allowed in basic editing?
It would have been nice in my image as well to only invert certain color ranges of the image but I didn't think it was allowed.
Owens image is beautiful however!
Message edited by author 2006-05-03 02:51:20. |
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05/03/2006 02:56:58 AM · #2 |
There are some ways to do it under basic editing. The most common is the "Selective Color" adjustment in PS.
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05/03/2006 03:57:31 AM · #3 |
Originally posted by Are_62: I noticed that "Serenity" by owen had a "Selective Colour
Invert" adjustment. Pardon my ignorance, but is this allowed in basic editing?
It would have been nice in my image as well to only invert certain color ranges of the image but I didn't think it was allowed.
Owens image is beautiful however! |
Thanks for the compliment Are.
I did selective colour adjustment to the entire image and then inverted the entire image. I think/hope it's legal in basic. |
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05/03/2006 04:24:55 AM · #4 |
Originally posted by owen: Originally posted by Are_62: I noticed that "Serenity" by owen had a "Selective Colour
Invert" adjustment. Pardon my ignorance, but is this allowed in basic editing?
It would have been nice in my image as well to only invert certain color ranges of the image but I didn't think it was allowed.
Owens image is beautiful however! |
Thanks for the compliment Are.
I did selective colour adjustment to the entire image and then inverted the entire image. I think/hope it's legal in basic. |
There is no problem with using selective colour in basic.
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05/03/2006 06:42:11 AM · #5 |
Originally posted by owen:
Thanks for the compliment Are.
I did selective colour adjustment to the entire image and then inverted the entire image. I think/hope it's legal in basic. |
Thanks for the clarification - I appreciate it!
I also use selective colour adjustment all the time in basic but misunderstood and thought you had only inverted parts of the image (i.e. everything but the blue) while water and sky remained intact. |
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