For example mixing blue and orange produces green, rather than something towards grey
Can compliments be mixed somehow to get various grays?
Rebelle 5 seems able to do this.
For example mixing blue and orange produces green, rather than something towards grey
Can compliments be mixed somehow to get various grays?
Rebelle 5 seems able to do this.
I suppose it's a trade off...
can you mix yellow and blue to get green in Rebelle 5?
What happens when you mix red and green ... or yellow and purple... in Rebelle?
yellow and blue mix to green in Rebelle and ArtRage
BUT
yellow and purple mix to a brownish in Rebelle, similar to paints; wrongly to red in ArtRage
blue and orange mix to greyish in Rebelle, wrongly green or red in ArtRage
red and green in both Rebelle and Art Rage mix to somehing redish green, very sensitive to the proportions
Rebelle seems to come slightly closer to a gray
So the problems in ArtRage color mixing are (1) yellow and purple (2) blue and orange
This is what I get in AR.
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June.
Oh God of homeless things, look down
And try to ease the way
Of all the little weary paws
That walk the world
today. - Unknown.
http://enug66.deviantart.com/gallery/
[My setup: hp 15in laptop,11th Gen Intel Core i7-1165G7 @ 2.80GHz 2.70 GHz, 8.00 GB RAM, 24in Acer 2nd monitor, Huion Kamvas 20 Pro display tablet, Windows 11, ArtRage Vitae.
My desktop is extended across three monitors.]
hi,
two options I can think of, depending on your app version and workflow preferences.
1) in artrage vitae, you can create your own blending profiles for the real color blending paint mixing mode.
you can save them for later use, you can make several different presets, and see if you can get the results you're looking for across the variety of paint tools you use.
2) you can start your images in rebelle, lay the color washes down, and export that to artrage. any dry medium inside of artrage will simply glaze the pigment over and over, and wet media will blend according to artrage's internal model, but you can always correct stuff later, by either overpainting directly, or using color correction tools.
hope this helps!
It seems that real color blending is the less real
I usually turn RCB off because it makes it easier for me to control the color. For colors that cannot be obtained this way, you can use presets. If this option is enabled, it will get unnecessary shades where they are not needed, like here
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In both cases the pallete knife was used for color mixing and it is not hard to guess where RCB mode was enabled...
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