How do you determine the spot to place interior points?
Also, I can't figure out how to make the curve boxes larger.
Even though your snow was beautiful, I am not looking forward to winter. I live in Ohio and we get our share.
JoAnn H
JoAnn has a question
Ok...better for the interior points...
Think of the curve -for a moment as a length of elastic rope. If you pull the rope into a straight line and then move the center...It becomes a curve. You need to "control" that curve by putting Stakes in the rope so it cannot bend. For the merry go round you want to open the shadows but "control" the effect so it does not effect anything past the quarter tone on the shadow side.
See the article about the Lizard tail curve...http://www.curvemeister.com/wiki/index.php?title=Special_Curves:_Lizard_Tail
If you get to close to the adjustment you can make a flat spot where the curve is nearly flat...this is not a good thing...you always want some curve to the adjustment. That flat spot will make the area it effects look solarized. If it is a color channel you are trying to make a neutral where one cannot exist.
There are no Hard and Fast rules here but work as close tot he adjustment as possible without creating the flat spot.
Think of the curve -for a moment as a length of elastic rope. If you pull the rope into a straight line and then move the center...It becomes a curve. You need to "control" that curve by putting Stakes in the rope so it cannot bend. For the merry go round you want to open the shadows but "control" the effect so it does not effect anything past the quarter tone on the shadow side.
See the article about the Lizard tail curve...http://www.curvemeister.com/wiki/index.php?title=Special_Curves:_Lizard_Tail
If you get to close to the adjustment you can make a flat spot where the curve is nearly flat...this is not a good thing...you always want some curve to the adjustment. That flat spot will make the area it effects look solarized. If it is a color channel you are trying to make a neutral where one cannot exist.
There are no Hard and Fast rules here but work as close tot he adjustment as possible without creating the flat spot.
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