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Post by darthmouse on Jun 23, 2009 0:27:25 GMT -5
I did that, and ff00ff changed into fc00ff. Is there a way to stop this?
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Shadow
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Post by Shadow on Jun 23, 2009 2:02:11 GMT -5
I did that, and ff00ff changed into fc00ff. Is there a way to stop this? Hm... Odd... Are you using photoshop, or GIMP?
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Vyse
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Post by Vyse on Jun 23, 2009 2:07:42 GMT -5
I did that, and ff00ff changed into fc00ff. Is there a way to stop this? Did you go into the palette and add ff00ff before using the fill?
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Post by darthmouse on Jun 23, 2009 11:35:17 GMT -5
@ Shadow- GIMP.
@ Vyse- Yeah. I set the color to ff00ff, selected the background, and chose "Fill with foreground." I'm guessing it's because of the 32-color indexing I did that the color is changing. I tried to "Fill with foreground" without indexing to 32, and ff00ff did NOT change. It seems I need to somehow keep it in the index palette...?
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Shadow
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Post by Shadow on Jun 23, 2009 12:22:32 GMT -5
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Vyse
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Post by Vyse on Jun 23, 2009 12:37:22 GMT -5
He doesn't need Photoshop; he needs to do what I'm telling him to do.
Index with one less color than necessary (assuming you're doing a small portrait, the max is 32, so index with 31). Go to Windows>Dockable Dialogs>Color Map. In the window that appears, use the + button to add ff00ff as the 32nd color. Fill the background with magenta. Save.
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Post by darthmouse on Jun 23, 2009 13:49:12 GMT -5
>.< I knew I'd heard that once before. Thanks.
Edit- Worked like a charm. Thanks again, Vyse!
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