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Format : Linework : Photos
: Image Manipulation
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: Protecting Your Artwork
Linework
- quality optimisation
If
you're starting with source material that isn't
very good quality, there are things you can do
to improve it.
Take
the graphic below, which has been sourced from
a childrens' book that was over 50 years old.
The paper is often very foxed or yellowed and
the ink faded. This is what it looks like when
I start. To get from the top image to the bottom
one could take five or ten minutes of digital
manipulation, but the end result is infinitely
better than if I'd scanned it as line art, as
I've had control over the loss of detail all the
way through the process.
dhakshvkshcv
I
won't go through the process in fine detail, there
are whole sites devoted to Paint Shop Pro and
Photoshop tips - I'll just give you a basic run
through the processes:
Firstly,
I scanned the image at 144 dpi and full colour
so that I'd have "room to move" (so
it was actually twice the size that it appears
here).
Secondly,
I increased the contrast and brightness until
the background was much lighter. I do this slowly,
10 or 20% at a time to make sure I'm not losing
the linework. The idea is to increase the difference
between the linework and the background as much
as possible.
Once
the background is much lighter, I use Magic Wand
to select it. The tolerance I use on the Magic
Wand depends on the variation of tones in the
area I want to select - this example varied from
quite pink to quite yellow, so I had to use a
relatively wide tolerance - this means that you
lose a bit of detail, as the linework will get
eaten away a little - hence increasing the contrast
earlier. With my background-colour set to white,
I then delete the selection. This gets rid of
the mucky bits caused by the texture of the paper,
foxing etc. Experiment with the tolerance - I
usually start with about 10% variance from the
chosen pixel's RGB colour.
Magic
Wand only selects one area, so you'll need to
repeat this process for all the main areas that
need to be cleaned up. You can do it all at once
by holding "shift" to add to the
existing selection or "control"
to subtract from the existing selection (that
natty trick works with most tools in most graphics
packages, and is one of the most useful things
I've ever learned - it means you can even combine
tools to make a selection, such as magic brush
to select a large area and then "control"
and lasso to remove a certain area from the selection
before deleting it).
Once
I've got rid of all the mucky bits and have a
nice clean white background, I resize it to 72
dpi and the width or height I need for the page.
Having the graphic as full-colour when you resize
will give you a much better result than doing
so at 256 or less colours. This is worth remembering
when you're working with other people's gifs -
always increase a gif to full-colour while
you're doing any manipulation, then drop it
back down to 256 or fewer colours when you save
it.
Resizing
the picture will make it go a bit fuzzy (and remember,
I mean making it smaller as you'll never enlarge
it for reasons discussed earlier) - this is because
the software has had to average pixels to calculate
the smaller version of the image. This can be
improved by using "Sharpen Image" -
this gives you back nice sharp linework, and is
one of the many functions that will only work
at full-colour.

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