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Freebies
The Freebies are plug-in filters for Photoshop and other paint programs. They change colors in simple ways and you can use them free of charge.
To use this software, you need a paint program which accepts standard Photoshop 3.0 plugins. Just put the plug-in filters into the folder where your paint program expects to find them. If you have Photoshop, the folder is Photoshop:Plugins:Filters or Photoshop:Plug-ins. You must restart Photoshop before it will notice the new plug-ins. They will appear in the menus under Filters->Flaming Pear. Most other paint programs follow a similar scheme. If you have Paint Shop Pro: you have to create a new folder, put
the plug-in filter into it, and then tell PSP to look there. In
PSP 5 or PSP 6: choose the menu File-> Preferences->General Program
Preferences... and choose the Plug-in Filters tab. In PSP 7: choose
the menu File-> Preferences->File Locations... and choose the
Plug-in Filters tab. From PSP's menus, choose the plugin. For example, choose Image->Plug-in
Filters->Flaming Pear->Tachyon. If you have PSP 7, look in Effects->Plug-in
Filters->Flaming Pear->Tachyon.
Most of these filters do just one effect apiece and have no controls. Here are some example effects that you can do. Open a favorite picture for these examples -- you won't see anything if you start with a blank canvas. Select part of the picture, and invoke a filter.
Tachyon ("Tak-ee-on," a faster-than-light particle) inverts the
the bright and dark areas of your picture, but does not change
the hues. Ordinary inversion would change blue to yellow, for
example.
ChromaSolarize combines the Tachyon effect with solarization,
which produces attractive surreal effects.
Exchanges the left-eye and right-eye channels in red/cyan anaglyphic 3D pictures.
Produces a blocky, garish look like the most primitive graphics of 1982. There is a separate Pixel Trash guide.
Two ways of making a quasi-Bayer halftone pattern that includes shades of grey.
These filters work on RGB images those with three channels of color: red, green, and blue. By swapping data between channels, they transform color, changing the pictures chromatic harmonies in useful ways.
These bend square tiles to make them suitable for texture-mapping a sphere without the ugly pinch at the poles. You will probably want to use two copies of the warped tile side-by-side
to make an equirectangular sphere map.
RGB->HSL takes a normal image with its red, green, and blue color
channels and replaces these with hue, saturation, and luminance
respectively. Your paint program will think the image is still
in RGB form, so the colors will look bizarre. HSL->RGB changes
the image back. The HSL color system is a way of representing colors. Hue is the
property of a color that classifies it as red, yellow, blue or
green, or a blend of these. Saturation is the vividness of the
color; and luminance is the total amount of light it throws off. If you use these filters and your paint program lets you paint
into individual color channels, you can change the image in a
way difficult to do in RGB mode. Try Using RGB->HSL, then Gaussian Blur, then HSL->RGB.
Vitriol changes colors contrast as if viewed through colored
glass, but without tinting the image. Imagine you want to use black-and-white film to take a spooky
picture of a landscape. You could make the sky unnaturally dark
by placing a yellow glass filter over the lens; this will make
the blue sky very dark, while the appearance of the green landscape
is affected very little. It would be fun to do the same effect in color. But the yellow
filter would of course make the picture yellowish. But Vitriol
will get the contrast effect without the colorization. Just set
the foreground color to the color of the imaginary colored glass,
and choose Vitriol from the Filter menu. Vitriol automatically provides density correction, so you can
use a strongly colored filter without making your picture go dark.
The effect is most vivid on areas of strongly saturated color;
apply repeatedly to intensify the result.
Produces colorful haze.
Ornament takes a photo of a mirrored ball and unwraps the reflection
into a form called an "equirectangular panorama." There is a separate Ornament Guide.
Solidify turns an image layer entirely 100% opaque. It reveals
partially transparent areas, and can even help repair the corrupted
transparency channel that some paint programs occasionally produce.
It's also good for quickly filling in missing regions of a panorama. Solidify A, shown here, yields a blurrier result than Solidify B.
Ghost turns an image layer into a semitransparent picture made entirely of black pixels. It produces a smoked-glass effect that's hard to produce by hand.
AntiGhost turns a layer's transparency values into shades of grey.
TransLine makes every second scanline transparent. TransTone is similar, but turns a 50% pattern of pixels transparent. This can be useful if you are making transparent GIFs for the web. Flaming Pear Software has more complex filters available here. They all come with a free trial period, after which they can
be purchased online or off. Answers to common technical questions appear on the support page, and free upgrades appear periodically on the download page. Trouble with your order? Orders are handled by Kagi, which can be reached at admin@kagi.com . For bug reports and technical questions about the software, please
write to support@flamingpear.com . |