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    Lighting with Sketchy Edges

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved SketchUp Components, Materials & Styles
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    • olisheaO Offline
      olishea
      last edited by

      looks cool al, i love line-overs like this.

      But I would set your blending mode to 'multiply' for the lines so that all the white disappears. Then reduce opacity to around 50%.

      Its a shame you have lost the detail in the render, unless that was your intention. It would be nice to have the detail and the bold lines together.

      oli

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      • olisheaO Offline
        olishea
        last edited by

        sorry like this. I hope you dont mind.

        Blending mode=Multiply. Line Layer opacity= 100%

        http://i654.photobucket.com/albums/uu269/olishea/attic_edit.jpg

        Line Layer opacity 50%

        http://i654.photobucket.com/albums/uu269/olishea/attic_edit_50.jpg

        Line layer opacity 60% with colorized render layer.

        http://i654.photobucket.com/albums/uu269/olishea/attic_edit_50_orange.jpg

        what do you think?

        oli

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        • Al HartA Offline
          Al Hart
          last edited by

          Thanks olishea,

          I'll work harder to keep the detail. I thought I had the white in the line image set to transparent, but I must have missed something.

          Does the "multiply" effect in Photoshop set the transparency to match the darkness of the overlaid image?
          Or does "multiply" retain the darkest of the two images?
          (I am trying to do this directly from SketchUp - by blending images myself - without using Photoshop)

          Al Hart

          http:wiki.renderplus.comimageseefRender_plus_colored30x30%29.PNG
          IRender nXt from Render Plus

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          • Al HartA Offline
            Al Hart
            last edited by

            Multiple in Photoshop

            @unknownuser said:

            Looks at the color information in each channel and multiplies the base color by the blend color. The result color is always a darker color. Multiplying any color with black produces black. Multiplying any color with white leaves the color unchanged. When you’re painting with a color other than black or white, successive strokes with a painting tool produce progressively darker colors. The effect is similar to drawing on the image with multiple magic markers.

            I'll look harder and see how they do it...

            [Edit]
            I found this equation. I'll give it a try...

            http://www.binary-artist.com/photoshop_tutorials/images/multiply_formula.gif

            Apparently they just "multiply" the RGB values individually.

            Al Hart

            http:wiki.renderplus.comimageseefRender_plus_colored30x30%29.PNG
            IRender nXt from Render Plus

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            • olisheaO Offline
              olishea
              last edited by

              its easy al.

              with multiply.......all the white turns transparent

              with screen.....all the black turns transparent.

              If you ever wanna get rid of the white without masking/erasing etc just multiply. its a single click operation although yes you gotta use photoshop.

              it sounds like a load of photshop mumbo jumbo that quote (just like the manual lol), just give it a go!!

              oli

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              • tbdT Offline
                tbd
                last edited by

                I think you need to have only the edge on 50% like this:

                (base * edge * 0.5) / 255
                

                SketchUp Ruby Consultant | Podium 1.x developer
                http://plugins.ro

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                • Al HartA Offline
                  Al Hart
                  last edited by

                  @unknownuser said:

                  I think you need to have only the edge on 50% like this:

                  (base * edge * 0.5) / 255
                  

                  Thanks TBD.

                  I wound up using

                  (base * (255 - (255-edge) * opacity))/255
                  

                  Otherwise the 0.5 would make the image too dark for the white of the edges.

                  Al Hart

                  http:wiki.renderplus.comimageseefRender_plus_colored30x30%29.PNG
                  IRender nXt from Render Plus

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                  • Al HartA Offline
                    Al Hart
                    last edited by

                    The equation I found works pretty well at 100% opacity of the edge lines.
                    attic2-100-m.jpg

                    I'll have to think a little about how to apply it to the 50-50 blend.

                    [Edit]
                    I think I got the 50% version to work properly as well.
                    attic2-r50.jpg

                    Al Hart

                    http:wiki.renderplus.comimageseefRender_plus_colored30x30%29.PNG
                    IRender nXt from Render Plus

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                    • tbdT Offline
                      tbd
                      last edited by

                      you can implement more modes - check out photoshop blend modes explained

                      SketchUp Ruby Consultant | Podium 1.x developer
                      http://plugins.ro

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                      • Dave RD Offline
                        Dave R
                        last edited by

                        I like it. I've done something similar to that.

                        Etaoin Shrdlu

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                        (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

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                        M30

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