I'll do it tomorrow.johnathan1 said:edit: and could you make it say "Tiffany" instead? Maybe put johnathan1 smaller, and up in the corner? (Sorry for being such a pain in the ass)
exander said:Edit: It would look better if you slowed down the transition, and maybe put in another slide.
This one.BlkSupra87 said:special request. can you do a 1/2 black and bottom half burgundy supra?
exander said:This one.
BlkSupra87 said:Yes... I wanted to see what i would look like... the trim also burgundy color. Try to get the burgundy... hmmm maybe that black cherry on the scion tc??
DreamerTheresa said:Peeeeksure to work with?
DreamerTheresa said:Oh, God. You can always tell Photoshop newbs from their gratuitous use of the lens flare.
Do you mean like this or just the car. Anyways that is the car flipped.Syris said:Wow Thanks Exander. I like it, even makes my car seem like it is RHD. Out of curiousity is it possible to see the car like that before flipping it?
meggs521 said:What's lens flare?
Perhaps because the most dramatic images ever seen by regular people are typically made possible only through photography and television, a lens flare is often used to deliberately invoke that same sense of drama. A lens flare is also useful when added to an artificial or modified image composition because it adds a sense of realism, implying that the image is an un-edited original photograph of a "Real-life" scene.
For both these reasons (implying realism and/or drama) artificial lens flare is a common effect in various graphics editing programs, although its use can be a point of contention among professional graphic designers. Lens flare was one of the first special effects developed for computer graphics because it is the result of relatively simple optical principles. During the mid- to late-1990s, lens flare was a popular graphical gimmick for computer and video games, and is now accompanied by other more complex atmospheric effects that add an even greater sense of realism.