Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 11 to 16 of 16

Thread: GIMP and layers/pattern fill

  1. #11

    Post

    Actually, I should step back a little from that statement. It might make a difference, but I don't know how the Gimp handles dpi. If the software behaves properly, it shouldn't make a difference. If it doesn't, then that might, indeed, be the problem.

    I'll leave it to Rob to say yea or nay on that one.
    Bryan Ray, visual effects artist
    http://www.bryanray.name

  2. #12
    Guild Member Chgowiz's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Northern Chicago Suburbs
    Posts
    68

    Post

    Quote Originally Posted by Midgardsormr View Post
    If you're not printing the image, ignore dpi. It has zero effect on what you see on the screen. Can you also show us what it looks like at 600 X 600, so we have something to compare it to?

    Sure, here is the pattern at 600, and then scaled down.





    You can't see the pixellation in the above, so when I zoom in on the scaled down image, this is what I see:


  3. #13

    Post

    Heh. Well, don't zoom in on it. That'll cause pixellation every time! Now that I know what I'm looking at, in terms of the workspace, I know exactly where the problem is, and that's the magnification. Don't try and judge the quality of your image at anything other than 100%; that's what your audience is going to be seeing it at, after all.

    It looks terrific at actual size--better than the 600 px version, in fact--so there's really no need to worry about what it looks like zoomed in. If you want to make images that scale upward nicely without ever seeing that pixellation, take a look at Inkscape, a vector drawing program.
    Bryan Ray, visual effects artist
    http://www.bryanray.name

  4. #14
    Guild Member Chgowiz's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Northern Chicago Suburbs
    Posts
    68

    Post

    Quote Originally Posted by Midgardsormr View Post
    Heh. Well, don't zoom in on it. That'll cause pixellation every time! Now that I know what I'm looking at, in terms of the workspace, I know exactly where the problem is, and that's the magnification. Don't try and judge the quality of your image at anything other than 100%; that's what your audience is going to be seeing it at, after all.

    It looks terrific at actual size--better than the 600 px version, in fact--so there's really no need to worry about what it looks like zoomed in. If you want to make images that scale upward nicely without ever seeing that pixellation, take a look at Inkscape, a vector drawing program.
    I'm sorry, I should have posted the full unzoomed version as well. Here is the full map, with no zoom, with the forest layer burned in. See the pixelation? Or is it supposed to look jagged like that with a burn? Should I blur it?



    It looks a little better with multiply (see below), and I guess I could make it less opaque to get a similar effect to burn, but the pixelation was just bugging me.


  5. #15

    Post

    It is your choice of burn as an overlay mode.

    Here are 4 useful ones for this kind of work:
    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	2008-04-25_120919.png 
Views:	57 
Size:	527.2 KB 
ID:	3284

    Burn is done by inverting the back later, dividing by the front layer then invert back again. It effectively boosts the contrast and saturation:

    255-((255-B)*255)/(F+1) (formula from Beginning GIMP, from Novice to Professional)

    So because your pattern fill is highly contrasted you get colour blow-outs of the back layer (that look like pixelation).

    Here is that paper bg with a gradient using burn (top is normal blend, bottom is burn):
    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	Paper1.png 
Views:	53 
Size:	384.3 KB 
ID:	3285

    I personally use overlay, and duplicate the overlay layer if the effect isn't dark enough.

    -Rob A>

  6. #16
    Guild Member Chgowiz's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Northern Chicago Suburbs
    Posts
    68

    Default

    Quick reply:

    Thanks Rob - I ended up using a double burn layer with playing around with the opacity. That solved a lot of my problems, as did making my pattern a smaller one. I guess it's a matter of trying a bunch of things and seeing how they work. One thing's for sure, I'm learning a lot more about Gimp than I knew before and that's all good.

    Thanks again - when I'm done with the Zombie tutorials, I'll post the results.

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •