10-10-2009, 12:24 PM
You weren't really accurate with the horse, on its back there is a green line. Same applies for the area around its legs.
In general, try to refrain from these kinds of images if you do color separation:
- reflective surfaces. Desaturating elements and having their reflections still colored isn't looking too nice. And it's darn hard to desaturate the reflections without destroying the focus.
- fuzzy transitions such as hairy surfaces. They require a focused desaturation (in the example of the horse, it'd be: desaturation of green only), which is also darn hard.
- transparent materials. The objects behind shall be gray but still have a certain color tone (that of the transparent material). Also takes some bigger amounts of time.
In general, try to refrain from these kinds of images if you do color separation:
- reflective surfaces. Desaturating elements and having their reflections still colored isn't looking too nice. And it's darn hard to desaturate the reflections without destroying the focus.
- fuzzy transitions such as hairy surfaces. They require a focused desaturation (in the example of the horse, it'd be: desaturation of green only), which is also darn hard.
- transparent materials. The objects behind shall be gray but still have a certain color tone (that of the transparent material). Also takes some bigger amounts of time.
Silverthorn / Blue Phoenix
~ Breaking LFE since 2008 ~
"Freeze, you're under vrest!" - Mark, probably.
» Gallery | » Sprites | » DeviantArt
~ Breaking LFE since 2008 ~
"Freeze, you're under vrest!" - Mark, probably.
» Gallery | » Sprites | » DeviantArt