Here's a handy troubleshooting tip for working with pictures.
Sometimes there is entirely too much information in an image or it's just not very good in the first place. Any image can be Embossed with most desktop graphics programs to simplify it and make it easy to spot patterns or problems at a glance.
The example crummy image I'll use is 100_1300.jpg. It's a bad photograph of the damaged original crankshaft #1 journal from my '80G. The details, the lighting, damage and marks have been exaggerated and highlighted by Embossing.
The original image has been converted to 256 color grayscale, the color was inverted and then run through the Emboss effect. Like an infra-red picture, inverting the color for embossing gives a better image because the bumps, nicks, dings, scratches appear correctly; bumps stick out and holes look like holes.
And that's my 'Stupid Trick' for the day!
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Sometimes there is entirely too much information in an image or it's just not very good in the first place. Any image can be Embossed with most desktop graphics programs to simplify it and make it easy to spot patterns or problems at a glance.
The example crummy image I'll use is 100_1300.jpg. It's a bad photograph of the damaged original crankshaft #1 journal from my '80G. The details, the lighting, damage and marks have been exaggerated and highlighted by Embossing.
The original image has been converted to 256 color grayscale, the color was inverted and then run through the Emboss effect. Like an infra-red picture, inverting the color for embossing gives a better image because the bumps, nicks, dings, scratches appear correctly; bumps stick out and holes look like holes.
And that's my 'Stupid Trick' for the day!
.
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