Photoimpact tutorials
One important thing to take into consideration though is your filetype upon exporting your image. For color, select "transparent." That should do it right there. But with most graphics programs, it will ask you to choose a canvas size, color, and resolution as soon as you open a new document. I have never used PhotoImpact, so I'm not sure what to tell you, really. i mean like you know how this smiley has the same color background as the site. how do u set it to transparent before creating the image. I don't know Ulead PhotoImpact 7 at all, but with Photoshop you set it to be transparent before creating the image. Is there a way to make it so the background is transparent when i put it on the web? like if i put it here it will be the color of the site? Im wondering if i can do this on Ulead PhotoImpact 7. o.Sorry for new topic but im new to pic editing and want to get better at it. Hopefully someone still watches this community.
![photoimpact tutorials photoimpact tutorials](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/98/e3/82/98e38255f841a2c92952bd96dd79af67.gif)
#Photoimpact tutorials how to#
I tried playing with the tone map, color adjuster and highlight/midtone/shadow, but I haven't figured out how to make it work right if any of those could do it. It seems to be a way to control the levels of RG&B (with 3 values). For now, for the tutorial I was following, since the image involved was a B&W, I just set it to multiply and the final version looks similar.but I don't know how this will work in general (since there's actually a multiply option).Īnother question I have is about a "channel mixer" and if there's any relative equivalent in PI. Any version will work, and I'm fine with multiple steps if it means I get the same effect. Someone asked before about the burning options, and now I see what they meant.ĭoes anyone know what the equivalent to "color burn" and "color dodge" might be in PI? I know what "linear" burn and dodge are equivalent to, but not the color ones. Unfortunately, while I've partially solved one mystery, I'm left with some new questions. I am quite thrilled to say while looking at a tutorial for something in GIMP, I've found a way to get an approximation of the "exclusion" blend mode in PhotoImpact (when using a color layer, at least - it involves 3 copies of the color with the layers set to inverse multiply, inverse multiply and difference, for those who want to know - I have no idea if this will also work with actual pictures yet). I've spent most of my afternoon browsing tutorials and practicing my google-fu while testing things/making icons in PhotoImpact.
![photoimpact tutorials photoimpact tutorials](https://www.ephotozine.com/articles/PhotoImpact-8-slideshows--software-guide-4819/images/utpex2.gif)
So.this is a long shot, because we've been so quiet lately, but it's worth trying. :/ If I'm missing something, though, I'd gladly be corrected! :) I read somewhere that the adjustment layer is like a "lens" that filters over the whole set of layers beneath, but since PI is object-based, I don't really believe there's anything comparable. :( I am slowly learning how to use some of the similar tools (Color Balance, Color Adjustment, etc), but I only know how to apply them to the active object, not the whole set of objects in the image
![photoimpact tutorials photoimpact tutorials](https://s3.manualzz.com/store/data/023730455_1-ca4e674e9d9d6861e245c6182476859e-360x466.png)
x.X I think that one may actually be near impossible. Now all that's left for me to figure out is how best to mimic an "adjustment layer" in PI. ( Steps below the cut, for those who want to know. XDĪnd sorry about the double-post, but it's related to my last one, anyway. It's not as simple as, say, clicking a drop down menu and selecting "color burn," but it works! At least it has so far.
#Photoimpact tutorials trial#
After hours of trial and error, mix and match, cursing, hair-pulling and general icon-related grumpiness.I have finally figured out a solution for the "color burn" blend mode option found in other image editing progams.