Author | Thread |
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02/27/2007 12:25:37 AM · #26 |
really excited to see everyone elses entries.
I'm happy with mine. Took me a while to set it up. It was boiling hot in my room between the lights i used, and I also closed all the doors.
Happy with it :D |
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02/27/2007 08:17:14 AM · #27 |
I'm such a dork! I got my shot all ready last night and finally submitted it around 11pm...rushing to get it in on time. I got to work this morning and was excited to see my score, and ... "HEY, where is IT?" OOPS. I was a day early. HA. |
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02/27/2007 08:52:10 AM · #28 |
HELP!
I just finished editing my entry for low ley challenge but i noticed that though the dimensions are 640 X 530 the file size is just about 60 KB ( from the original file of 2.3 MB. Is it Okay to post such a picture though when i see it on the preview it looks ok to me.
Though it looks fine on my monitor, Will it appear too grainy to the voters?
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02/27/2007 09:31:43 AM · #29 |
Originally posted by manniagni: HELP!
I just finished editing my entry for low ley challenge but i noticed that though the dimensions are 640 X 530 the file size is just about 60 KB ( from the original file of 2.3 MB. Is it Okay to post such a picture though when i see it on the preview it looks ok to me.
Though it looks fine on my monitor, Will it appear too grainy to the voters? |
often in low key shots the file size will be very small. you are ok. |
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02/27/2007 09:33:46 AM · #30 |
The very same thing happened to me. Mine looks fine though-not too grainy or anything of that sort! :) Don't worry! |
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02/27/2007 09:36:41 AM · #31 |
you may..."use only Adjustment Layers (or their equivalent). An Adjustment Layer is a special type of layer containing no image data that lets you experiment with color and tonal adjustments without permanently modifying the pixels. Adjustment Layers must be applied in Normal mode."
What exactly does this mean? |
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02/27/2007 09:44:17 AM · #32 |
In a nutshell this all means that you can make adjustments to the whole image than any particular spot or any defined area. Stuff like saturation, contrast etc
Message edited by author 2007-02-27 09:44:33. |
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02/27/2007 09:55:52 AM · #33 |
Originally posted by daboardergirl: you may..."use only Adjustment Layers (or their equivalent). An Adjustment Layer is a special type of layer containing no image data that lets you experiment with color and tonal adjustments without permanently modifying the pixels. Adjustment Layers must be applied in Normal mode."
What exactly does this mean? |
It means NO spot editing. You can make changes that affect the entire image, but may not use any tool that would change a given spot or area of an image. Adjustment layers are used to change contrast, color tone, levels, etc., and do not change the actual pixels in the image. |
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02/27/2007 10:01:11 AM · #34 |
if I find some time I might try to shoot a pic tonight. I love low key photo's so I hope my boyfriend hasn't got a list of jobs for me to do tonight (still building the kitchen :P )
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02/27/2007 10:03:10 AM · #35 |
Thanks manniagni & idnic. Reedited mine and is good now! |
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02/27/2007 10:17:46 AM · #36 |
can we use the adjustment layer selective colour to the entire image? |
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02/27/2007 10:20:20 AM · #37 |
Originally posted by crisf: can we use the adjustment layer selective colour to the entire image? |
yes |
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