04-29-2014, 07:55 AM
Oh whoa, gorgeous Wip! Loving it :)
And yeah, well, two things - adding just enough of a compliment on your base pigment wouldn't violate the gamut mask, it would just make you walks towards the true-neutral-gray in the center of the color wheel, right? That is almost always there on the gamut mask anyway. But of course, you need to stay on your right amount of saturation indeed.
And yeah, James Gurney's methods were discussed extensively; The general consensus was that he could have more artful choices if he want on color schemes, not necessarily masking out colors but using anything on the extremes as an artful choice.
So james gurney is very realistic, but the same way you will almost always saturate/increase contrast on a raw photo, you could probably extrapolate the gamut masking technique to gain some depth and meaningful color choices for you to design with.
So we were mostly thinking on color schemes, and not masks. The key exercise, anyway, is to exercise restraint anyway - and you can achieve that by both methods :)
It's mostly a philosophy choice by this point anyway. The way I think about it, the more methods you know, the better - you can always chose the best method for each image/problem you have at hand :)
On the Wip: lovely <3 When it's time, give the characters some softer edges too <3 And I am not sure going that high in value on the blues behind of the trees is adding anything at the moment. You can probably lower the values there to keep the light mostly on the foreground, to help with focus. But amazing, coming really strong so far!
And yeah, well, two things - adding just enough of a compliment on your base pigment wouldn't violate the gamut mask, it would just make you walks towards the true-neutral-gray in the center of the color wheel, right? That is almost always there on the gamut mask anyway. But of course, you need to stay on your right amount of saturation indeed.
And yeah, James Gurney's methods were discussed extensively; The general consensus was that he could have more artful choices if he want on color schemes, not necessarily masking out colors but using anything on the extremes as an artful choice.
So james gurney is very realistic, but the same way you will almost always saturate/increase contrast on a raw photo, you could probably extrapolate the gamut masking technique to gain some depth and meaningful color choices for you to design with.
So we were mostly thinking on color schemes, and not masks. The key exercise, anyway, is to exercise restraint anyway - and you can achieve that by both methods :)
It's mostly a philosophy choice by this point anyway. The way I think about it, the more methods you know, the better - you can always chose the best method for each image/problem you have at hand :)
On the Wip: lovely <3 When it's time, give the characters some softer edges too <3 And I am not sure going that high in value on the blues behind of the trees is adding anything at the moment. You can probably lower the values there to keep the light mostly on the foreground, to help with focus. But amazing, coming really strong so far!