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Selective shading - Printable Version +- Gimp-Forum.net (https://www.gimp-forum.net) +-- Forum: GIMP (https://www.gimp-forum.net/Forum-GIMP) +--- Forum: General questions (https://www.gimp-forum.net/Forum-General-questions) +--- Thread: Selective shading (/Thread-Selective-shading) |
Selective shading - rickk - 03-08-2021 In the attached picture of wire ribbon matting, there is a shading effect that I guess was intended to simulate texture by the original artist. (the diagonal banding) Is there a process in gimp to selectively darken the light spots while selectively lightening the dark areas, with the ultimate goal of achieving a uniform appearance? I've been playing around with alternate "dodge and burn" processes from a brush set larger than the overall image, with mixed success. My gut feeling is that if I keep at it over and over long enough, I will eventually luck into an acceptable result. But knowing you folks are far more skilled than I, got me to wondering if there might be a better way, less depended upon random chance, that is repeatable, which one of you might share? https://i.imgur.com/QZFqcVM.png Here is the likely original used to make the above composite. https://i.imgur.com/oYlIkex.png RE: Selective shading - Blighty - 03-09-2021 An alternative to playing around with lightening and darkening. Start from scratch and make a pattern. Attached is a file pattern.png Put that in your patterns folder (or use it as a clipboard pattern). Then bucket fill with the pattern. Add a background with the colour of choice. Attached is the xcf file used to make the pattern. Note the active selection. Use Edit > Copy visible to extract the pattern. RE: Selective shading - Ofnuts - 03-09-2021 You can sort of reduce the bumpiness like this;:
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RE: Selective shading - Krikor - 03-09-2021 Just an idea, although my result is not a good example. ![]() https://imgur.com/9QH57wD Select an eligible pattern within the image, in order to decrease the unwanted contrast RE: Selective shading - rickk - 03-09-2021 Thanks for the suggestions, each of you!! I am particularly grateful to ofnuts, for providing a solution that I can use on pictures where I have no control over their composition. (sometimes you see a great picture, with really poor lighting, stuff like that) I photograph a lot of wildlife, and unfortunately they refuse to pose. Many many "great" moments captured, on the wrong side of the sun. RE: Selective shading - Ofnuts - 03-09-2021 (03-09-2021, 04:58 PM)rickk Wrote: Thanks for the suggestions, each of you!! I am particularly grateful to ofnuts, for providing a solution that I can use on pictures where I have no control over their composition. (sometimes you see a great picture, with really poor lighting, stuff like that) The technique can even out the lighting (fairly efficient when you take a picture of a document, and end up with one sight lighter than the other) but isn't a panacea against bad lighting. When I shoot wildlife, I take the other approach... I search animals where they can make good shots. No time wasted making unusable pictures : ![]() RE: Selective shading - rickk - 03-09-2021 Krikor, Yeah, I kinda wandered down that path too. Here is a desktop that resulted from that effort. https://i.imgur.com/uBWWaOB.png RE: Selective shading - rickk - 03-09-2021 (03-09-2021, 05:07 PM)Ofnuts Wrote: When I shoot wildlife, I take the other approach... I search animals where they can make good shots. No time wasted making unusable pictures : Unfortunately, my models tend to be highly mobile, seldom giving me the luxury of "framing" a shot. My back yard: ![]() |