Stripview
Tutorial: The perfect nothing...
Ambrosius77 on 18. May, 2011 — Lang: No text
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Description
4% grey
This strip is a reply to Nothing, Microdot, BURNout!!!, Nothing - test - tutorial, FEED ME!
1% inverted green (Magenta) (from the football theme pack but Xmas green is good too)
1% inverted red (aka cyan)
= f4f4f5 code grey used as background on this site instead of white)
I've checked it with a color picker, it is really the same color.
Boring explanation:
On the RGB (red green blue) scale all colors represented as 0-255 level of each color. 255 equals FF in hexadecimal.
The grey color has the same red, green and blue value at normal. So when You set the black shape opacity to 4% it has F5F5F5 value, that's not the exact one that used as a background.
With 1% opacity colored shapes I have changed this value a bit. The engine works the way as adding RGB values of different overlapping shapes together then divide it by 2.
I just tried the colors then made a printscreen and pasted it into my favorite free photo manipulator program called Gimp.
There is a color picker in Gimp that shows the selected color RGB code.
That's all.
Looks simple but It's tricky.
Comments
Une single row est certainement plus vaste (PUISSANTE) qu'une pleine page.
>>>> Ambrosius, Maître des Lieux
C'est vrai.
Mais le rien appelle le rien.
… … …
Ou pire encore : le pas-grand-chose.
(preuve, mon commentaire)
@OccamsRayzor brilliant comment
Too bad that creation is much slower than destruction...
Le Rien risque de s'occuper de vous.
Et alors, douleur.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hUJagb7hL0E
I liked it... :D
:))))))
On the RGB (red green blue) scale all colors represented as 0-255 level of each color. 255 equals FF in hexadecimal.
The grey color has the same red, green and blue value at normal. So when You set the black shape opacity to 4% it has F5F5F5 value, that's not the exact one that used as a background.
With 1% opacity colored shapes I have changed this value a bit. The engine works the way as adding RGB values of different overlapping shapes together then divide it by 2.
I just tried the colors then made a printscreen and pasted it into my favorite free photo manipulator program called Gimp.
There is a color picker in Gimp that shows the selected color RGB code.
That's all.
Looks simple but It's tricky.
edited by owner
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