ddaydreams opened this issue on Dec 21, 2009 · 10 posts
ddaydreams posted Mon, 21 December 2009 at 12:40 PM
I'm getting close to what I'm shooting for.
In the picture shown here there are 3 color bands on the terrain and I'm showing the color map used which has 3 solid colors rather than the typical Gradient these color maps have.
I downloaded the 3 solid color color map as a freebie so I don't know how they even did
that.
My question is:
Is it possible to have 7 solid bands of color in a procedural color map?
When ever I try to add a color to ad to the 3 color map it makes a gradient and using the color sliders below the map in the color map editor just mess up things.
Can someone make a solid 7 color procedural map (any 7 colors that are different from each other, you know like a rainbow with solid colors) and tell me how they did it?
I'm also open to doing this some other way. I'm using Vue 8 complete
Any help.
Frank Hawkins/Owner/DigitalDaydreams
Frank Lee Hawkins Eastern Sierra Gallery Store
My U.S.A eBay Graphics Software Store~~ My International eBay Graphics Software Store
Rutra posted Mon, 21 December 2009 at 2:11 PM
Rutra posted Mon, 21 December 2009 at 2:19 PM
I started this color map with the 'engineer' map, from the 'terrain editor maps' folder. This map has 5 key colors, from left to right: blue, cyan, green, yellow, red. To make the hard transition from blue to cyan, I created another key color to the right of the blue, with the exact same color (copy color -> paste). Then I dragged the cyan keycolor to the left, until it overlapped the new blue keycolor. I had the first hard transition, from blue to cyan. Then I made another keycolor to the right of the cyan, with the exact same color as the cyan. Dragged the green until it overlapped the new cyan keycolor. And so on, using the same method for every hard transition.
Hope that helps.
ArtPearl posted Mon, 21 December 2009 at 2:24 PM
The other way is to have just one keypoint per color, but use a step function as a filter - number of steps= number of colors you want.
"I paint that which comes from the imagination or from dreams,
or from an unconscious drive. I photograph the things that I do not
wish to paint, the things which already have an
existence."
Man Ray, modernist painter
http://artpearl.redbubble.com/
ddaydreams posted Mon, 21 December 2009 at 3:33 PM
Thanks to both for the help on copy and paste the color method
Artpearl said
Quote -
The other way is to have just one keypoint per color, but use a step function as a filter - number of steps= number of colors you want.
Can you use the preset called rainbow, then apply 7 steps to it as you mentioned so that it comes out in 7 solid colors. Maybe a screen shot of the function editor settings.
I can't seem to do that.
Frank Hawkins/Owner/DigitalDaydreams
Frank Lee Hawkins Eastern Sierra Gallery Store
My U.S.A eBay Graphics Software Store~~ My International eBay Graphics Software Store
ArtPearl posted Mon, 21 December 2009 at 4:12 PM
"I paint that which comes from the imagination or from dreams,
or from an unconscious drive. I photograph the things that I do not
wish to paint, the things which already have an
existence."
Man Ray, modernist painter
http://artpearl.redbubble.com/
nruddock posted Mon, 21 December 2009 at 5:11 PM
The best solution is to use the "Quantize" filter node which will allow you to specify the number of steps you need rather than trying to set them up by hand.
ddaydreams posted Mon, 21 December 2009 at 11:30 PM
Frank Hawkins/Owner/DigitalDaydreams
Frank Lee Hawkins Eastern Sierra Gallery Store
My U.S.A eBay Graphics Software Store~~ My International eBay Graphics Software Store
ddaydreams posted Tue, 22 December 2009 at 12:10 AM
The second more greenish one is what I'm after. COOL! GOT ER DONE.
It is just part of an art style I'm working on. I'm sooo glad I picked Vue as my main art tool, I was thinking about carrara pro 7 which I also own, but had to focus on learning one main app.
Carrara renders really fast, but I think Vue is more versital and is on a faster devoplement track.
I pretty sure that with help. Vue can do lots of things I have in mind.
So my work flow will be Zbrush for some organic shaped models.
Vue for terrains, skys ,coloring, displacements and rendering.
Photoshop cs number whatever for postwork.
Thanks to all for your help. I learned much today and have some sence of accomplishment.
Frank Hawkins/Owner/DigitalDaydreams
Frank Lee Hawkins Eastern Sierra Gallery Store
My U.S.A eBay Graphics Software Store~~ My International eBay Graphics Software Store
ArtPearl posted Tue, 22 December 2009 at 9:52 AM
Excellent!
The quantized filter is obviously the one to use if you need regular intervals & accuracy. A graphic filter is the one for flexibility. (I never needed/used anything regular:) )
"I paint that which comes from the imagination or from dreams,
or from an unconscious drive. I photograph the things that I do not
wish to paint, the things which already have an
existence."
Man Ray, modernist painter
http://artpearl.redbubble.com/