Here's a Crx I recently chopped. I havent had much time recently to chop, so i had to put other things aside and try this.
everything is brushed except for the IC pipe.
C&C welcome
not bad, good choppin.
.... i'm still not a fan of hondas
wow, thats an amazing chop! i love the color, lights, what u did with the front wheels and smoke, all of it is just amazing!
On the other hand....you have other fingers.
i had lots of toys when i was young.slinky,etc.but once i found my penis,that was all she wrote
how exactly do you do a color change like that? I just recently got photoshop and i've been playin around with it in my free time but learning very slowly......
one methone is to create a new layer above the image of the car, use brush to color over and easer to get rid of excess where you don't want to color the image (dropping the opacity helps). you'd have to change the layer mode to overlay and apply a levels adjustment layer over only the colored area. witht he levels move the slider (white) on the right to the left, and the slider on the left (black) to the right. this helps the contrast which is lost by coloring.
another method would be to apply a hue/saturation layer to only the desired area. from there you can either ajust the over all hue, narrow it down to specific colors to change, or colorize (usually the easiest). again use levels to maintail a shiney finish on the colored area.
by that way, that's photoshop 7.0, not sure if cs or earlier versions are different at all.
one method is to create a new layer above the image of the car, use brush to color over and easer to get rid of excess where you don't want to color the image (dropping the opacity helps to see what you're coloring while you work). you'd have to change the layer mode to overlay and apply a levels adjustment layer over only the colored area. witht he levels move the slider (white) on the right to the left, and the slider on the left (black) to the right. this helps the contrast which is lost by coloring.
another method would be to apply a hue/saturation layer to only the desired area. from there you can either ajust the over all hue, narrow it down to specific colors to change, or colorize (usually the easiest). again use levels to maintail a shiney finish on the colored area.
by that way, that's photoshop 7.0, not sure if cs or earlier versions are different at all.