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- BONUS OFFER
-
- This one is your free bonus!
-
- SEMI-TRANSPARENT SHADOWS
-
- When you have a picture background all but complete, but wish to add a
- few foreground objects or perhaps some large text for titling, it would be
- desirable to be able to have the object cast a semi-transparent shadow -
- one which darkens the background areas it falls on, but allows some detail
- to show through the shadowed area. Double-click on the picture "Shadow" to
- view it. Look for detail in the shadowed areas. To examine it in more
- detail, you'll need a hi-res paint program with "zoom" option.
-
- HR136 can make it easy for you to create the effect in "Shadow"! I have
- worked out the technique for Deluxe Paint II, and will leave it to your
- ingenuity to devise a technique for other paint programs.
-
- Assuming you have a picture background ready to add foreground with
- shadows:
-
- 1. First, save the picture to disk so you don't lose it!
-
- 2. Swap to the alternate screen with "j", and use it to construct your
- text title or foreground object.
-
- 3. Pick the title or object up as a brush, and stamp a duplicate of it, if
- it consists of one solid color. If not, pick it up, press F2 (to make it
- solid and one color) and stamp this as the duplicate.
-
- 4. Swap to the other screen with "j" and load HR136. It will change your
- palette. You must go to your top pull-down menus using the right mouse
- button, and choose "Picture", then "Color Control, and then "Restore
- Palette" to get the previous palette back.
-
- 5. Be sure that color 0 is selected as the background color. Now look down
- the left-hand column of HR136 colors, and pick a fairly DARK color or shade
- of grey that would make a good tint for a shadow.
-
- 6. Use the Brush Tool to grab a 2 x 2 brush sample of this color. Use the
- right mouse button on the Fill icon to set up "From Brush" and "Pattern"
- selections on the submenu. The window to the right of these gadgets should
- fill with the color you want.
-
- 7. Swap screens again, select "Fill" with the left mouse button, and click
- within your shape or title to fill it with the color mixture.
-
- 8. Grab the foreground shadow as a brush. You may wish to save it to disk
- at this time. As you move it around the screen, it will seem as if you can
- see through it as though through a pair of sunglasses! This is an illusion
- - it is a checkerboard of color 0 and another color.
-
- 9. Swap your screen, and load your background scene, thus erasing the HR136
- palette screen.
-
- 10. Move your shadow carefully into position on the background, allowing
- the desired offset from the eventual location of the foreground object
- or title, and stamp it on the background. It should appear as a dark shadow
- with the background scene showing through it!
-
- 11. Swap screens, and grab the foreground object or title as a brush.
-
- 12. Swap again, and stamp the foreground slightly offset to the shadow
- (usually up and to the left a bit).
-
- 13. Look carefully. The shadow will appear uncannily real - so real that
- you would swear the object or title is an inch or two IN FRONT of the
- background!
-
- THINGS TO TRY (OR AVOID):
-
- 1. The effect is best in higher resolutions.
-
- 2. You may wish to use perspective or distortion on the shadow. You may
- even invert it, if the light source appears to be behind an object.
-
- 3. The shadow effect works poorly when you stamp the shadow over areas that
- already use HR136 color mixes. The problem is that you hide one of the two
- colors in the previous mixture with a new "checkerboard" of color.
-
- 4. Shadows falling over other shadows will also lack the desired realism.
- You may be able to "hand-paint" an even darker color in a checkerboard
- pattern (using magnify mode) in an area where two shadows overlap.
-
- 5. If you are transferring to video, always check to see if the shadows are
- solid and steady, without vibration or moire patterns. Certain colors,
- particularly complementary colors (far apart in the spectrum) that are fully
- saturated (rich) can cause video "artifacts" which are distracting.
-