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Date: 15 August 2010 16:35 (UTC)
ratcreature: RatCreature at the drawing board. (drawing)
From: [personal profile] ratcreature
But how can it work better if I color correct after the merger? I mean, say I have an orange-brownish area in the middle of an A3 paper, that I scan in two bits, and for mysterious reasons (maybe because in the first scan it is on the left side of the scanner while I scan the upper half, and on the right if I scan the lower) in the first scan it appears a bit darker and more reddish brown in the second a bit lighter and more yellowish-brown. If I merge first, and then modify colors to be lighter and yellower so that the first would look like my original orange, the second would look worse, because it was too yellow to begin with?

And I think I need to upgrade my Gimp... I don't really want fancy brushes but from the screenshots it always looked as if in photoshop you could somehow pick different pressure and line characteristics of the brush tool with differnt brushes rather than just form/pattern, so if Gimp can now do that as well, that would be awesome.
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