gimil wrote:porkenbeans wrote:You guys are busting my balls.
In this example the object is not dark or light in relation to the background. (it is the same)Therefore, a drop shadow, or outer glow, will both work just as well to make the object stand out. It IS the "contrast" that you are producing that makes it stand out.
Saturation is only how much color is included. It is the brightness, not saturation that we are talking about.
That is NOT to say that saturation levels can't be played with to produce a "contrasting" effect. Texture and pattern as well can be used to help achieve this contrast, that makes an object stand out.
You see you didn't say that, what got from your tutorial was 'to make dark colours stand out you should use a light glow and to make light colours stand out you should use a drop shadow'. When in reality there are a million and one different ways to make both light and dark colours stand out
Yes, But I did not make the TUT. to show all of the ways.
I noticed that on several projects lately, people are using outside glow to make things stand out (in all instances). Anyways, I hope that this conversation has helped someone.
BTW, I went in to my old dinosaur, (photoshop 7.0). I was going to try to do some experimenting to see what differences there are between the glow and shadow transfer modes.
I found out something very interesting. It seems that my old program does not let me make "light" shadows, or "dark" glows. They both allow for choice of color, but the effect just fades itself out as you approach the same level of brightness. So when I put white on the drop shadow, or a black on the outer glow, they just do not show up.
The old program with its color defaults, on the glows and shadows, seem to guide you into choosing the correct transfer mode for the application.
I believe that this old program has an advantage, in that it prevents making the mistake, that led me to write this TUT.
Here is how I operate the glow and shadow modes with the 7.0-
I leave the programs defaults intact. The shadows with "black", and the glows with off white (yellowish).
So when I am deciding which to choose to use, I just click on one. Adjust its parameters, and only later do I mess with changing the color of the mode. If even then.
I am usually correct in choosing the correct mode, so I rarely come across an instance where the effect is faded, or canceled out all together.