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Digital dio 101

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  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, August 8, 2003 11:17 PM
huskerguy -
I just re-did it and it is over on the Aircraft page. Click on the "photo" of the text and print or save ( I sized it to 8' x 10.5" ) If it doesn't work, its on the rongeorge pages under tips, tricks, etc. Have fun playing ! I know I do !
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, August 8, 2003 10:22 PM
Thanks for the info Pixilater, great stuff.
I'll give it a try too soon :)

  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, August 8, 2003 9:49 PM
I was just about to re-post this over on the Aircraft forum. I will re-size the photos for you. My original images are large - 2272 x 1704 pixels @ 180 pixels/ inch. I will try to have this done by midnight (USA Eastern time) I almost forgot that we're not all on the same clock ! Pix.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, August 8, 2003 9:33 PM
i want to print this Diorama 101 lesson, but the width will not let me get a complete printing of the article
  • Member since
    November 2005
Digital dio 101
Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 7, 2003 6:39 PM
Here's a pic that I did and the elements that composed it. The original aircraft pics were isolated using the polygonal lasso in the toolbox pallate. I zoom as close as I can, and follow the outline of the model. The isolated image is copied and pasted to the background. (edit-copy, edit-paste, move tool from model to background.) Transform-rotate to position model on background. I always keep models on separate layers. Any alteration (such as the Zeke's wing) are the only layers that I merge until completion. I always save a copy in layers, in case I want to change anything later. The blurring effects are in the filters option (gaussian & motion blurs) You can change the angle & intensity of the motion blur. The Zeke was resized (image-image size) and flipped horizontally (edit-transform-flip horizontal) The flames, after erasing what I did not want, were put on a layer over the Zeke. They were then "drawn out" using edit-transform-scale option. I also copied the background, "painted" the smoke (airbrush tool) and lowered the opacity of that copied layer to see thru the smoke. That's a basic explanation, I will be happy to answer individual questions. Thanks for letting me share, Pix.http://rongeorge.com/albums/reference/Over_the_Pacific_elements.sized.jpg[/img]
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