(Untitled)

Mar 26, 2006 18:55

Can anyone tell me how to get this coloring:


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xcanonx March 26 2006, 17:42:40 UTC
Looks like a dark blue exclusion and/or a tannish multiply layer. Not sure though, I`m new at this.

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charmling March 26 2006, 18:04:58 UTC
There are probably pink or blue color burn layers in there. I don't think there's a tan multiply, but there's probably a dark blue exclusion on a low opacity.

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tsuyogari March 26 2006, 18:07:55 UTC
You could try some of these: < href="http://lovelamp.livejournal.com/8651.html#cutid1">1 2 3

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tsuyogari March 26 2006, 18:08:38 UTC
Sorry for the messed up link~

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bourniio March 26 2006, 18:32:02 UTC
Thanks will try them out.

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like_ohemgee_ew March 26 2006, 21:01:00 UTC
It looks to me like the first one is made with curves. Just up the brightness on the RGB and add a bit more shadow at the bottom. Up the red a little and then go to blue and do multiple points for the blue in the pic.

There are some good curves tutorials if you don't know how to use them at all.

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daynawashere March 26 2006, 21:33:51 UTC
I'm not the one who asked the question, but thank you, that's very helpful - I hate when people just say "it's curves", lol

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like_ohemgee_ew March 26 2006, 21:44:59 UTC
Ok, try this. It's not exact but it works well enough.

Duplicate base, set to screen 50%
New layer, flood fill #F49AC1 set to soft light 100%. You may want to erase the bit thats not on the person.
New layer flood fill #083960 set to colour burn 100% and erase the bit over the person.
New layer, stamp the image (shift+ctrl+alt+e)
Ok, now you do curves on this layer. You'll have to work this out yourself but something pretty much similar to what I said above, fiddle about until it looks decent to you.
Duplicate the layer you just made, desaturate and set to soft light.
Now finally, make a new layer, flood fill with #E5D0B9 and set to multiply 100%.

Hope that helped.

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