I watched a youtube video of someone doing a portrait oil painting in ArtRage and noticed they had a customized Color Picker.
How would one do this?
I watched a youtube video of someone doing a portrait oil painting in ArtRage and noticed they had a customized Color Picker.
How would one do this?
Does this help?
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 painting real-estate is extended across three monitors.]
Thanks Enug!
You can also open custom colour pickers by clicking on the current colour at the bottom right of the colour picker then choosing 'Custom colour pickers' from the menu.
Regarding the colour picker in the original post, I suspect that may be ArtRage's normal colour picker but due to highly compressed or low quality video, it's not looking smooth anymore which would give it that blocky effect,
removed removed
Last edited by roma Golich; 04-17-2019 at 07:50 PM.
No i really don't think that's the case.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1N4XDOYFtjw
Anyway what i like about this Color Picker, is that it shows the Color ranges incrementally in those 'cells', like a simplified range to pick from.
Could that be done programatically?
Like a sort of cellular filter applied to the Color Picker?
When he changes color by selecting the outside edge colors, the cells in the color picker update.
I agree with the DaveRage's opinion about the problem:
My experiment:
1. copy the c.p.; 2. Paste in the IrfanV;3.Dec. the c. depth. 4. And got the following img:
Attachment 97458
Can you analyze that video? E.g. I pass my video through a filter to extirpate any P-info.
But the q. — „Could that be done programmatically?“ — is highly interesting.
I see so you're able to replicate, very good.
I agree with you about it.
I thought it was being done via some filter.
I like the image you've created.
It's much more akin to oil painting isn't it?
The normal color picker gradiant is to granular, too fine.
This cellular look is nice.
Visual Mathematics!
What do you think?
Do you think anybody can actually do something like that or this wishful thinking?