Methods for transforming a render into Victorian era painting?

2»

Comments

  • Oso3DOso3D Posts: 15,110

    Oh wow.

    FotoSketcher is amazing, and yeah, good UI.

    Probably the best 'postprocess' sketcher thing I've ever seen, and I love the price. ;)

    I need to experiment with combining it with my art shaders...

     

  • Oso3DOso3D Posts: 15,110

    This took 5 seconds. Wow.

     

    Transformation_FotoSketcher.png
    1080 x 1080 - 2M
  • FistyFisty Posts: 3,416
    edited February 2017

    "Paint HDRtist" by lipebianc in Filter Forge does a nice job.

     

    Post edited by Fisty on
  • BlueIreneBlueIrene Posts: 1,318
    hacsart said:

    Have a look at Mediachance Dynamic Auto Painter -  lots of painting styles available for it, does a decent job.. Heres a phot that was run through it using a Monet based style..

    This is an absolutely incredible program, for so many reasons. I took a look at the trial version and, after giving it much thought, was about to buy it when the opportunity to purchase Facegen at what's probably the lowest sale price it's ever been came up so I bought that instead. If it hadn't been for that offer I would have bought this already, as I actually wanted it more :) Buying both isn't in the budget right now, but Dynamic Auto Painter is definitely next on my hit list. It's amazing - thanks for bringing it to my attention :)

  • JOdelJOdel Posts: 6,322

    So do any of the PS plugins work in Elements? I cannot afford the full PS, but I would buy Elements if they work in it. I read "some" scripted actions work in Elements, and I'd like to use those, too. But I am worried that the actions I want would just so happen to be the ones that don't work with Elements. And those Nik collection items, too.

    My interest is in possibly making some comic and manga style pics. Though some of the stuff posted here is absolutely beautiful!

    Most of them, to the best of my knowledge. PS Elements is basically a stripped down version of Photoshop. The underlying program is almost identical, but a lot of the features of the professional-grade program are simply missing. For, example, while this may have changed more recently (or not), originally PS Elements was limited to RGB (and greyscale). Which meant it was fine for the web, or for printing on an inkjet, or even a color laser printer, but if you were trying to go to four-color processing through a press, you needed to take the image into Photoshop to get to a CMYK image, or to adjust one.

    However, nearly all of the plugins that do what is being discussed here are built to work in RGB, and rather a lot of Photoshop plugins become unavailable as soon as you go to CMYK.

Sign In or Register to comment.