Leetehslakz04r Or Teknics Photoshop Project
#12
http://www.supercars.net/cars/1980@$B...Group%204g.html
so where the hell do you go that you see cars like that.
geeze.
so where the hell do you go that you see cars like that.
geeze.
#13
i tried but that pic is really hurting, i can try a bit more later but this is as good as i could get it for now without really degrading quality, size of the pic had to suffer though a bit. I think if i resharpen it and do some masks, and THEN shrink the image size it should come out much better.
kevin.
kevin.
#14
thanks guys, i cant afford $700 for photoshop, so i'll just post pic here and have you fix them
The car on the left is a 1984 BMW M1, and the right is a 1982 320 CSL
Both cars have 3.8 liter twincam i-6's in them and went quite well at the Glen a few weeks ago. It was raining out and the lens on my digicam was fogged up
thanks kev, if you have nothing to do, fix it
-nick
The car on the left is a 1984 BMW M1, and the right is a 1982 320 CSL
Both cars have 3.8 liter twincam i-6's in them and went quite well at the Glen a few weeks ago. It was raining out and the lens on my digicam was fogged up
thanks kev, if you have nothing to do, fix it
-nick
#17
I tried, but I couldn't do any better than teknics.
There is a complex explanation of how to do this, like viewing the image through the different spectrums and simply put, deleting the spectrum that's causing the blurriness. Most of the time it's the green light that causes the problem.
Alas, the explanation was not good enough so I didn't figure it out.
The picture did look very clear though when it was all grey! LOL.
There is a complex explanation of how to do this, like viewing the image through the different spectrums and simply put, deleting the spectrum that's causing the blurriness. Most of the time it's the green light that causes the problem.
Alas, the explanation was not good enough so I didn't figure it out.
The picture did look very clear though when it was all grey! LOL.
#18
Originally Posted by Dysfnctnl85' date='Jun 28 2003, 11:25 AM
I tried, but I couldn't do any better than teknics.
There is a complex explanation of how to do this, like viewing the image through the different spectrums and simply put, deleting the spectrum that's causing the blurriness. Most of the time it's the green light that causes the problem.
Alas, the explanation was not good enough so I didn't figure it out.
The picture did look very clear though when it was all grey! LOL.
There is a complex explanation of how to do this, like viewing the image through the different spectrums and simply put, deleting the spectrum that's causing the blurriness. Most of the time it's the green light that causes the problem.
Alas, the explanation was not good enough so I didn't figure it out.
The picture did look very clear though when it was all grey! LOL.
basically what you have to do is go through the picture, even tho to the eye it seems like flat layers there are specific layers in a digital photograph with specific controls such as outline etc. by way of masks you can pull out the specific digital layer and attempt to insert faux layers to mix out the blurriness. unfortunately the original image was fubar and i cant get it back to 100%
kevin.