Calseeor opened this issue on Apr 24, 2001 ยท 7 posts
Calseeor posted Tue, 24 April 2001 at 8:04 PM
TygerCub posted Tue, 24 April 2001 at 9:20 PM
ENGELKEN posted Tue, 24 April 2001 at 10:11 PM
Ghostofmacbeth posted Tue, 24 April 2001 at 10:21 PM
You might try the canvas setting and instead of going full B&W you might overlay the thing in photoshop or something similar as a partial ... so you see both. Good luck
Calseeor posted Wed, 25 April 2001 at 5:15 AM
Thanks for the complement Tygercub, glad you like it. :) Canvus...ahhhh yes! Great idea, I can't believe that thought never even crossed my mind. But, with the 3 of you mentioning it, I will jump right not it. grumbles at self for not thinking of that one Engelken, thanks for the image, that really helps me to visualize how it should look. I actually have paint shop pro (5, I think), so I can try those effects. Ghostofmacbeth (cool name, BTW), my room mate suggested that same thing, perhaps I should give that a whirl after all. Thanks for all your help everyone. I'll try this stuff out and be back begging for help if it doesn't look right...although I bet it will. Take care all, Eryk
deci6el posted Wed, 25 April 2001 at 12:53 PM
Before you do all that canvas texturing you might consider this for your original image: When I imagine an oil painting in progress I don't imagine that the artist started at the top of the charcoal sketch and worked in finished detail until they got to the bottom. You started the idea with your smudged edge, just take it further. Consider letting part of the chair only have a few intitial layers of paint or have the lower part have a little more base coat before revealing blank canvas and charcoal. Nice lighting! good luck
Calseeor posted Wed, 25 April 2001 at 2:30 PM
Deci6el, very good point. Hummmm..that may be a bit beyond my abilities at this point. I am very new to art work in general, let alone this 3d stuff. But..it sure can't hurt to try. Thanks very much.. ---Eryk