but how did you GET to Library? How do you open it?
@t.r.w.777811 ай бұрын
Such talented students
@isabelladamian2185 Жыл бұрын
🤘 "Promo SM"
@Splodgo Жыл бұрын
I don't have that top menu in my Lightroom version. How do I find / enable it?
@brody6293 Жыл бұрын
"PromoSM" 💐
@chrismaceiko4113 Жыл бұрын
I thought that was Boy George! Damn . What a disappointment! Seriously !!!!
@SweetZombiJesus2 жыл бұрын
No such top bar exists in my Lightroom.
@caleb44852 жыл бұрын
ρɾσɱσʂɱ
@123youknowme2 жыл бұрын
A lot of important and useful information in such a short session. Thanks.
@anoojsharma6822 жыл бұрын
Ivy one 5 to be 2
@jessicajirzua66882 жыл бұрын
Wow it's great.
@dexterfoley59162 жыл бұрын
✋ p♥r♥o♥m♥o♥s♥m
@manccyclist2 жыл бұрын
But how do you get into the Library module interface ?
@abdulmuizchulan2142 жыл бұрын
Come to islam n success my brother
@InfoCodex3 жыл бұрын
super content
@leandrojsj3 жыл бұрын
Very nice!
@magicknight133 жыл бұрын
Engaging and very interesting! Thank you!
@jillianlee31364 жыл бұрын
2:55
@Raeburnsart4 жыл бұрын
I'm glad I found this video. It's a concept im wanting to explore. Who instructed this?
@EhurtAfy4 жыл бұрын
Nice video - I actually searched for this topic and this popped up. Great work!
@orlandow17235 жыл бұрын
yeah she can roll a doobie
@connieefurulee6 жыл бұрын
Just what I needed. Thanks for sharing
@YandereKnows6 жыл бұрын
omg 2010
@nickfanzo5 жыл бұрын
So?
@mmafightart6 жыл бұрын
Wow. Amazing. I never delved too deep into painting and have only discovered the concept of edges. Thank you for this tutorial. My paintings and drawings have always been naively constructed with everything basically getting a hard edge. I can’t wait to try this concept on my art. Thank you
@koleyw9326 жыл бұрын
Excellent tutorial given by a true professional, thanks so much.
@wilmingtonlongman6 жыл бұрын
Techni
@chrisopen37 жыл бұрын
just watched two of your clips on painting - they're really good, thank you so much for sharing!
@Cramondorf8 жыл бұрын
I feel the energy of this and it made me powerful hahaha! By the way I'm half Italian.
@Cramondorf8 жыл бұрын
Weird.
@fantasymind71158 жыл бұрын
= *Certificate in Intermediate Dreamweaver CS5 Online Course get learn here! .* shrsl.com/?~czie
@jmez9278 жыл бұрын
rby?????? nope
@renzo64906 жыл бұрын
Huh? what?? uhhhhh......aaaaaaaaaaarghhhh!?!?!? I understand your confusion. Too often, people use initials rather than whole words assuming their readers know what they mean. Rby stands for red blue yellow.
@carmentimm4148 жыл бұрын
Check this out for new ways to use the COLOR WHEEL!
@olafurssonkyllian81538 жыл бұрын
the japanese and chinese colour wheels are so much more complex than this one. the fact that you need two words in english to express the colour red-orange or yellow-green etc shows how limited your language and culture is. In Japanese we have a different word for each of those colours in the wheel . You have about 70 colours in english without using a combination of two words , in japanese we have more than 300 .
@seedlacey19507 жыл бұрын
The only 3 colors I need are red, white, and blue!
@marthadavis38578 жыл бұрын
Excellent tutorial, I will watch it several times.
@agentp199y79 жыл бұрын
lol
@krishamoeller79599 жыл бұрын
This is long to read, but for anyone that actually cares about this, please do:....I actually can't believe what I'm reading in some of these comments. People are confusing "Color Models" with "Primary Colors" and "Secondary Colors." These are two different things. RGB and CMYK are Color Models that were created for use in very specific types of machines, and do not represent primary colors or secondary colors. The reason your printer uses CMYK is because your printer uses ink, which relies on a subtractive method of coloring. This means that inks create colors by layering colors onto a white background (i.e. it "subtracts white"). In short, they work by taking away color from whatever background you put them on. This is why you cannot print baby blue ink onto black paper. In fact, they don't even make baby blue ink. What you are seeing as baby blue ink (in a baby blue marker, for example) in fact is just blue that has been diluted with water so that it will pick up more white from the background of the white paper you draw on. Inks work via this layering process. I don't know what idiot is telling you that cyan and magenta make blue (this makes a type of purple) and that yellow and magenta make red (this makes a type of orange). Your printer makes "red" on white paper by laying down more than one layer of magenta numerous times on top of the same surface area. So why does this happen? --> Since ink uses a subtractive coloring process, every time you layer ink on top of ink, the color becomes darker (it subtracts more white each time). However, true pigments don't do this. For example, if I layer magenta oil paint on top of magenta oil paint, I will still get magenta. It won't turn red or get darker at any point. This is because oil paints use "true pigments," which means that they add color to a surface (rather than subtract a color from a surface, as inks do). This is why you can have true baby blue oil paint, but do not typically have true baby blue ink markers (again, it is just diluted blue that picks up more white from the white surface that you draw on). In other words, using a baby blue marker on yellow paper will give you green, if that makes sense (it will show the yellow from the background), but using baby blue oil paint on a yellow background will still give you baby blue, since it is a true pigment. RGB on the other hand is a color model that was created specifically for backlit screens (like computer screens, tablets, cell phones, etc.). If you use a true yellow pigment on a backlit screen (i.e. if you shine a bright light through an actual yellow pigment) then you won't see yellow, you'll see white. So RGB is an altered color model that was created specifically for images shown on computer screens (or backlit screens) to compensate for this problem, just as CMYK is an altered color model that was created specifically for printers to compensate for the problems associated with inks (which use a subtractive coloring process). However, just because you deliberately alter a color model to work around problems created by a specific type of machine, doesn't suddenly mean that the primary colors and secondary colors change. The primary colors are still red, yellow, and blue, and the secondary colors are still green, purple, and orange. This does not change just because you had to create a "deliberately adjusted" color model to work around the problems caused by a very particular medium or machine. Red, yellow, and blue are still the primary colors "even when printers exist" and "even when computer screens exist." They are still the primary colors even when you are working on a computer screen or working with a printer. The term "Color Model" better describes the type of "coloring mechanics" that go on behind the scenes of the machinery to GET the colors that you actually need to pop-out (like "transparent, diluted blue" is the actual "adjusted color" that is "going on behind the scenes" when you are using ink in order to get "baby blue" to pop-out when you use this ink on a white background). In other words, CMYK and RGB are "deliberately messed up" color schemes that are used to compensate for (or work around) machinery that cannot actually use true pigments (like ink and backlit screens). I hope that makes sense.
@pw6titanium9 жыл бұрын
Noble Valerian Yeah you are correct, there is nothing like the saturation of a colour straight out of a tube and people also forget that you can't mix a transparent from 2 opaques. For a basic ''ideal '' palette I would try to get one colour from each of the 12 sections around a colour wheel in opaques and transparents + opaque and transparent whites and blacks. You may have to cut across several brands to get these 28 ' primary' colours ! The mixes are pretty clean in a high chroma palette....then there is a low chroma palette.... So, basically my definition of a primary is that if I can't be fucked mixing it then I'm buying it !!__a good site for colour is handprint.com_very comprehensive.
@TheRevolus8 жыл бұрын
+Noble Valerian THANK YOU SO MUCH Noble Valerian! Dude why there is not alot of people that understand what you said about light! The RGB ans CMY ( as we should call universaly ) are the right one. It's not because our real world materials is limited that we should stop our knowledge about the true color wheel I don't get why so many people think the right colors wheel is the traditional one. Maybe they should watch more StarStrek or something to think outside the box. One day we will be able to use light and emptyness to produce white or black and use the right RGB and CMY format. Thanks you again!
@gkar9095 жыл бұрын
E
@gkar9095 жыл бұрын
@Håkan Lundberg Hello. There are one interesting presentation in KZbin. Title name is - New video! Introduction to SMY Colour Wheel - Side A. Some old explanation of tertiary colours, but on other way better than others.
@mohannadaljabri498810 жыл бұрын
nice
@ColorMusicTheory10 жыл бұрын
The color schemes you have defined are precisely defining concepts of music theory. The square is defining a fully diminished chord (D#-F#-A-C). Complements are defining tritones (C-F#). The analogous color scheme is defining the sound relationship of Tonic-Dominant-Subdominant (F-C-G), i.e. closely related colors equal closely related notes. In fact, it is the analogous color relationship of the whole color wheel which directly correlates to the Circle of 5ths (Fifths) in sound. The isosceles triangle is defining the sound relationship of chromaticism or tritone substitution.
@pw6titanium9 жыл бұрын
Color Wheel Music Theory see frank fletchers colour '' keys'' in his colour harmony wheel_free download pdf..google it
@TheRevolus8 жыл бұрын
+Alba Whiteman the pdf is alot messy. Not modern. You should study RGB and CMY far more than the critics published on it. Think about futuristic light printing material. The RGB and CMY would fit in the perfect colors theory class.
@pw6titanium8 жыл бұрын
TheRevolus ...don jusko at realcolorwheel.com has shown how RGB and CMY fit together and demonstrates this by showing how light travels through crystalline substances in nature to produce colours that fit both systems.The Fletcher colour wheel is a handy tool to keep tonality in check with a limited amount of colours ; 3 main colours + 4 others out of a possible 12 colour palette. There are 24 '' keys '' ...12 possible combos and their 12 enantiomorphs. It stops you going off on a wild goose chase in colour mixing. A certain consistency of colouration ensues no matter if the colours are realistic or not. In jusko's wheel, there is a slight shift of the normal RYB wheel to where ultramarine blue is opposite yellow, violet is opposite green-yellow, cyan is opposite cad red lt / cad red , cad orange is opposite cobalt blue, magenta is opposite phthalo green( BS/YS),phthalo turquoise is opposite a quin. rose. He has a 36 colour palette where the opposites actually go very well to greying each other out. The colours list includes their manufacturers. The major problem with paints is the manufacturers themselves ; only give you sketchy details of what is in the paint, like optical brighteners, thickeners, dispersers, fillers and driers, so you don't just get the pigment itself and binder. Hence the colour changes because of commercial aims. The best of oil paints I've seen for purity of colour and concentration are Langridge , Rublev , Vasari and Mussini. As for music theory, I am a complete dunce and never understood it. I could never equate letters with sounds and I have no idea of pitch ;but I do understand numbers. I hear that before WW2 the standard for A was 432 Hz, not 440. ...432 has more factors ( harmonics ) which it is said, is supposed to be more natural. I can't make anything of it since I have a pair of tin ears. The well -tempered scale is based on the 12th root of 2 which is fine but that is only ONE scale. Keith Critchlow has shown derivations of many other scales from an equilateral triangle. Interesting would be to look at Chladni patterns of vibration that match the well established norms for each note on say , a grand piano. Cheers.
@TheRevolus8 жыл бұрын
Alba Whiteman Yes this one you posted is a good colors wheel. CMY - RGB In this colors wheel the RGB and CMY are just placed like that Y-R-M-B-C-G If we start from the yellow to the right realcolorwheel.com/colorwheel.htg/RCWnewTMmasterRGBBLnumRedRing650.png
@georgeelundgren753210 жыл бұрын
So glad to SEE how to do the soft edges business! Good job!
@imdifferentx210 жыл бұрын
People with dirty minds can't watch this
@purplegreenredyellow11 жыл бұрын
pizza azzip
@beaubrummell1111 жыл бұрын
this vid has been very useful to me.Thank you Derek Moya we want to learn not to make money
@aldisilvia11 жыл бұрын
Very confuse can you please make it simple?
@mujululu711 жыл бұрын
are there more video tutorial sessions by Sean Cheetham in this series?
@moondigit00711 жыл бұрын
To do front portraits it helps if you do a profile sketch first, and use it as reference to do the front face to get better likeness of all the features that may not be so obvious front wise.
@human15111 жыл бұрын
gawd you people are morons...arging about a color wheels. I think I'll believe sessions before any of you people. Thank you.
@Joshiii311 жыл бұрын
I think they're not talking about 'making colors', instead they're talking about 'matching colors'.