Golden paints has a free color tool on their website. You can upload a photo click on a color and it will tell you different combinations of recipes to make it. Oil and acrylics. I use it all the time. You can also use it in cmyk and also by pantone #'s. Very impressive amount of info
That's nice, I had never seen that before! Thanks so much for the tip, I'll put the link below for the viewers👍 👍marketing.goldenpaints.com/acton/fs/blocks/showLandingPage/a/35184/p/p-00cb/t/page/fm/0
This was a fantastic video Toon. So helpful. Never thought of using photo software to prepare me for a painting. Thank you so much you saved me hours of struggling at the pallet.
So I'm looking at the triangle inside the color wheel. * The bottom edge is tint (hue + white). * The right edge is shade (hue + black). * The right and bottom edges are like a value scale for the hue. Degree of saturation is the concept where I most struggle -- going from the bottom right corner (pure hue) towards the left edge. So I'm thinking the left edge represents 100% desaturated, with the edge being a grayscale. There is a lot to unpack in the triangle.
The Sketchbook Pro app that I installed on my ipad uses a diamond, rather than a triangle for value and saturation. (I believe they call Value something beginning with the letter L. Maybe lightness?) On the diamond, Value is up-down. Saturation is left-right. I'm just learning the software, so don't immediately see the CMY percentages, only RGB codes. If anyone knows how to display the CMY percentages, pls reply!! I believe the eyedropper tool is in the Premium Bundle, along with more brushes and other features. I paid a one-time fee of $1.99(US) for the bundle. The software is otherwise free. (No subscription!)
Thanks for sharing! I don't know the app, but in the end if painting is your main goal, don't worry too much about the cmyk values. Of course it can be handy as an indication, but you already have a nice representation of the place of the color in the spectrum and that is what's the most important thing.
Golden paints has a free color tool on their website. You can upload a photo click on a color and it will tell you different combinations of recipes to make it. Oil and acrylics. I use it all the time. You can also use it in cmyk and also by pantone #'s. Very impressive amount of info
That's nice, I had never seen that before! Thanks so much for the tip, I'll put the link below for the viewers👍 👍marketing.goldenpaints.com/acton/fs/blocks/showLandingPage/a/35184/p/p-00cb/t/page/fm/0
25:35 NOT wasting my time!! We love your tutorials. 💜 🇳🇱
😂😂😂👏thanks!
Awesome thank you
You’re welcome!👍
This was a fantastic video Toon. So helpful. Never thought of using photo software to prepare me for a painting. Thank you so much you saved me hours of struggling at the pallet.
That's great, you're welcome! 🎨👍
Thanks for the informative video sir, I can suggest inkscape for color picking and it's also free, I hope this helps.
Thanks for sharing!👍🎨
So I'm looking at the triangle inside the color wheel.
* The bottom edge is tint (hue + white).
* The right edge is shade (hue + black).
* The right and bottom edges are like a value scale for the hue.
Degree of saturation is the concept where I most struggle -- going from the bottom right corner (pure hue) towards the left edge. So I'm thinking the left edge represents 100% desaturated, with the edge being a grayscale.
There is a lot to unpack in the triangle.
Yes, that's correct! 👍👍🎨
The Sketchbook Pro app that I installed on my ipad uses a diamond, rather than a triangle for value and saturation. (I believe they call Value something beginning with the letter L. Maybe lightness?) On the diamond, Value is up-down. Saturation is left-right.
I'm just learning the software, so don't immediately see the CMY percentages, only RGB codes. If anyone knows how to display the CMY percentages, pls reply!!
I believe the eyedropper tool is in the Premium Bundle, along with more brushes and other features. I paid a one-time fee of $1.99(US) for the bundle. The software is otherwise free. (No subscription!)
Thanks for sharing! I don't know the app, but in the end if painting is your main goal, don't worry too much about the cmyk values. Of course it can be handy as an indication, but you already have a nice representation of the place of the color in the spectrum and that is what's the most important thing.