Preserved Topic: making a pic look like its in night vision |
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Author | Thread |
Obsessive-Compulsive (I) Inmate From: |
posted 04-30-2002 07:10
hello, |
Lunatic (VI) Mad Scientist From: the Psychiatric Ward |
posted 04-30-2002 07:23
are you talking about using Photoshop??? |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Stuck inside a Pixar short film |
posted 04-30-2002 08:08
Then of course you can use a plug_in!....there is one out there called NightVision :P |
Nervous Wreck (II) Inmate From: iasi, romania |
posted 04-30-2002 13:01
I tried this witha picture of a girl in a kitchen and i discovered i had to invert the photo first, bodies should apear a brighter green, beeing warm and all |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: Happy Hunting Grounds... |
posted 04-30-2002 13:22
Well, that depends on what type of 'night vison' you are talking about...infra red, or light intensifying. For infra red (which registers heat), yes, invert. For light intensifying, no. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: A little lower... lower... ahhhhhh, thats the spot |
posted 04-30-2002 14:15
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Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: Happy Hunting Grounds... |
posted 04-30-2002 15:07
Nice one, Krets. |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: |
posted 04-30-2002 18:13
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Maniac (V) Inmate From: The year 1881 |
posted 04-30-2002 18:42
Fire one, Mister Kretsminky! We'll teach them to park in my space... |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Cell 666 |
posted 04-30-2002 20:16
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Maniac (V) Inmate From: A little lower... lower... ahhhhhh, thats the spot |
posted 04-30-2002 20:57
You forgot the hastily drawn crosshairs of which none of the individual lines are quite the same length. |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Deeetroit, MI. USA |
posted 04-30-2002 22:59
I hate to be a monkey wrench, but if you are looking for a truly genuine night vision look, then the original light source must be removed. There is no light (aside from moonlight) that I know of that is as intense as the sun during nighttime. Perhaps the glowing edges filter along with these other ideas would give a more convincing appearance of night vision, maybe merging out the implication of sunlight. Just a thought! |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Vancouver, WA |
posted 05-01-2002 00:33
well, in the James Bond movies their was always an external light source and synax's one looks more realistic but not nearly as stylish |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Brisbane, Australia |
posted 05-01-2002 15:18
Don't the modern NV goggles display in Black & White only? I could be wrong though. |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: Happy Hunting Grounds... |
posted 05-01-2002 15:45
Yup. B&W. Good observation Drac. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: A little lower... lower... ahhhhhh, thats the spot |
posted 05-01-2002 16:54
I assumed he was probably looking for the more obvious green tinted night vision. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Cell 666 |
posted 05-01-2002 18:02
Isn't the B&W NV infrared? It reads body heat (any heat actually) - doesn't illuminate the moon light. |
Lunatic (VI) Mad Scientist From: the Psychiatric Ward |
posted 05-01-2002 18:54
Krets... good so far... way to clean. synax, noice, but the edges are to sharp... the night vision i have is a little softer than that and there is a bit of noise in the picture. That is also tru about the light source... but there is almost always more light than what the moon reflects... also, many of the better night vison scopes have INfrared illuminators that do wonders to the image. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: usa |
posted 05-04-2002 03:33
If you want hollywood style night vision, which I'm guessing is what most people recognize as night vision, I would get a photo that was not taken in direct sunlight, or if it was, get rid of any sun reflections with the Color Burn tool. Desaturate the image, and then go to Images > Adjust > Hue Saturation, click on colorize, and use the sliders to get a good pale green. If needed, go to Curves and raise the lighting levels, as night vision tends to look like a photo taken with too bright of a flash. Then gaussian blur the picture a little, and maybe add some noise on top of it and blur that, too. |