© 2003-2006 Mike Russell, All Rights Reserved

Examples:

If you get more out of examples than descriptions, or if you've read the rest of the manual and want to see how Curvemeister is actually used, you've come to the right place!

First things first. Start Curvemeister by clicking on the Curvemeister >Curves menu item, located at the bottom of Photoshop's Filters menu.

Example 1
Using the Wizard

The wizard introduces you to shadow, highlight, and neutral, and finishes up by comaring resuilts in each color space.

This example uses the Bath England Image.

Example 2
Another Walk with the Wizard

A second wizard example.

This example uses the Flower Pot Image

Example 3
Mona Lisa as Pin Up Girl

Using skin tone pins to restore the Mona Lisa
Save the image used in this example to disk by right clicking on the image itself.

This example uses the Mona Lisa Image

Example 4
No Highlight? Use Thresholds

For images that lack a shadow and/or highlight, Curvemeister offers a lavish built-in threshold command.

This example uses the Balloon Image.

Example 5
Use Lab to Light up Your Colors

For some images, when it comes to color, anything goes!

This example uses the Kite Image

Example 6
Trading the Earth for the Sky

Sometimes an automated system reaches for the sky, and falls flat on its face.
Here's how to make a trade that many think only the gods can do.

This example uses the Stonehenge Image

Example 7
Fat and Sassy Color

What a difference a mode makes
In this example we do the usual with highlight, shadow, and neutral, then crank hard on the colors, taking advantage of what each color mode is capable of.

This example uses the Meerkat Image.

Example 8
Pinning a Logo Color

Making a logo color match its designated color, using two different Pin Modes.

This example uses the Spy Ear Image

 



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