I was interested in using the blur effect on a few parts of my new LTG im
working on, but i encountered an annoying problem:
When i try to paint a blur effect over another color, such as green... i
have to move my brush over the same pixel a few times before it actually
makes the gray color i wanted... everytime i stroke the pixel, it slowly
changes to a gray color. Is there anyway i can make it to where one stroke
does the job, yet still makes the surrounding pixels a shade of the same
color to give it that "blended" look?
_____________________________
--MrDoomMaster
_____________________________
----- Original Message -----
From: "Marcel Celaya" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2001 5:08 AM
Subject: Re: To: Marcel Celaya - about photo paint
> --- In Lasertank@y..., "MrDoomMaster" <mrdoommaster@h...> wrote:
> > Well, as I said I would do, I now have Corel-photo paint. The thing
> is, it
> > isn't photo-paint 9, it is photo-paint 10! Now, so far I don't like
> Corel's
> > paint software because unlike Microsoft paint, you can't fill
> single pixels
> > at once. Photo-paint 10 automatically makes pixels surrounding the
> one I'm
> > coloring shaded to give the line a "focused" look I guess. Is there
> any way
> > to make it where I can paint pixel by pixel without the fancy blur
> effect?
> > _____________________________
> > --MrDoomMaster
> > _____________________________
>
> Yes, there is.
>
> I don't know how different Photo-paint 9 is from 10, but I tested the
> 10 program on runaware.com, and it really isn't much different...
>
> There are two ways to draw just 1 pixel squares like on paint:
>
> On the toolbar that has all the tools, (arrow, mask, paintbrush,
> etc.), click on the paintbrush. A new toolbar will appear with
> options for your paintbrush. You also may want to zoom in on your
> image. You will see a blurry circle on the paintbrush toolbar which
> is part of a drop-down list of other blurry circles. Keep going down
> that list until you see squares (not blurry squaers), pick one of any
> size, and reduce the size to 1. Select your color and draw!! Also, to
> further reduce that blurryness you don't like, (it really can help
> your graphics sometimes though!!), deselect the anti-aliasing button,
> the one with the stairs and red arrow in the paintbrush toolbar.
>
> You could also just select the rectangle tool and draw boxes.
> Try getting familiar with the program as well..i guess it's hard to
> make good graphics if you don't know about the program your using!!
> There are tons of features that will make your graphics look great!!
>
> To anyone else that wants to upgrade their featureless MS Paint, try
> www.ultimatepaint.com!! Its not as good as photo-paint, but at least
> its free.. also www.runaware.com if you want to try the photo-paint
> full version on the web, also free but requires membership (you also
> need a good internet connection)
>
> __
> FB|
>
>
>
>
>
> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
>
>
>