4 hours ago
(This post was last modified: 3 hours ago by IndiePubber.)
(Yesterday, 10:33 AM)rich2005 Wrote: I cannot see any quick way, Color Exchange wrecks anti-aliasing, other options such as the gmic plugin no better.
I think back to basics and use layer masks for each part you want to change.
It is worth spending a little time making a good selection of the windows, even if it means each window with rectangular select in add mode. Then save that as a channel, you will need it later. Invert and save that as well.
If you color select the white-ish render almost certain to include parts of the windows so you can use the saved channel to correct that. The timber is then just that selection inverted. Layer masks come from those selections and the layer is colorized as required. That should keep some of the shading.
I get this, Gimp 3.0.6 but it is an old method just the same with Gimp 2.8
I'm not sure if losing anti-aliasing will matter that much, as once I get this image the color I want, I'll be reducing it and stitching several copies of it together to make an overall pattern in the background.
So even though you could be right, that I won't like the effect Color Exchange gives me, I'd still like to know how to make the tool work so I can see for myself.
That aside . . . I was thinking this might involve layer masking. The embarrassing thing is that I've done it before, but it's been so long I've forgotten how. I know, I know--- I have to get into the manual and follow the instructions like a first grader. Back to basics, as you say.
(Yesterday, 07:51 AM)denzjos Wrote: This is what I did : I made a new pink layer, layer mode HSL Color, opacity 31. Then : 'new layer from visible' and use 'Colours / Brightness-Contrast' to optimise.
Is that something I can do in 2.8? I tried to find the Layer Mode HSL color option, but couldn't. Maybe I'm not looking in the right place.
There's a possibility I may have to edit this image in 3.04, export it as a .png, save it, then bring it back into 2.8 as a "new" photo.
(Yesterday, 11:55 AM)sallyanne Wrote: Here is a quicky for you
I selected the dark red and colourized it to a pinkish white colour.
Then using the 'select by colour tool ' changed the white to the pinkish. Then selected each window with the rectangle select and copied and pasted as a layer above the pink layer the changed the layer mode to 'grain merge' which still shows the insides of the windows etc
When selecting with the rectangle select make sure you click on 'add a selection to' in the tool options box.
This also could be an approach. Weird thing is, when I go to Colorize, it turns everything a shade of teal green. Clearly, I need to work with it more.
Oh! I think I've figured out why I'm not seeing any difference with Color Exchange. It's because, despite how uniform this dark red and off-white appear to my naked eye, the middle click is selecting only the pixels that happen to match the one I happen to hit. So when I do the exchange, it's nearly imperceptible.
Looks like I need to figure out how to reset the thresholds.
. . . Yeah, no. Tried that. Still spotty. Color Exchange would take way too long.

