you forgot the "Get to work on it instead of posting about it!" option

That's kind of what Marie says too. I'm just not comfortable altering them. So it is just me thenkymaera wrote:If you only adjust brightness or contrast to match how the cel looks inNot Sir Phobos wrote: I just don't feel it's right to adjust brightness or contrast in that context. I want my customer to know exactly how it looks when scanned, that way there is no surprises on their end.
person, I think that's perfectly valid. Customers should care how it looks,
not how the scan will turn out.
What's worse, I have a color vision anomaly, and while I see all shades, I see them in different intensities than "normal" sighted people. Red lettering on a black background is impossible for me to read because of this. So the colors I see in my cels are different from the colors that other people see, and so when I adjust my scans to what I see, it's quite possible that I'm creating an entirely new color scheme. Of course, what I see on the screen is also subject to the same color vision anomaly, so my guess is that it all evens out. But let's face it, the world we all "see" is an internal construct based on how our individual sensory systems are wired up.Not Sir Phobos wrote: Here is the funny part, monitors have their own color and contrast settings.So basicly your cell will never look right on any monitor but the one you did the work on.
Dude, pass me some more of that animation-specific weed there.sensei wrote:But let's face it, the world we all "see" is an internal construct based on how our individual sensory systems are wired up.
No prob, man, I'll fax ya another nickle bag just as soon as I take this here red pill my new friend just gave me.aernath wrote:Dude, pass me some more of that animation-specific weed there.sensei wrote:But let's face it, the world we all "see" is an internal construct based on how our individual sensory systems are wired up.