Image aging without photoshop - Printable Version +- The VG Resource (https://www.vg-resource.com) +-- Forum: Archive (https://www.vg-resource.com/forum-65.html) +--- Forum: July 2014 Archive (https://www.vg-resource.com/forum-139.html) +---- Forum: Other Stuff (https://www.vg-resource.com/forum-6.html) +----- Forum: General Discussion (https://www.vg-resource.com/forum-16.html) +----- Thread: Image aging without photoshop (/thread-19862.html) Pages:
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Image aging without photoshop - masteronion - 03-20-2012 Let's say I have a photo or picture. Whether it be of real life, a person, sprites, art etc. Now let's say i want to a age this and make it look like I am viewing the image from a DOS computer. Is this possible? Or is the only hope to use a blur tool or something? Is there a way to do this? Just lower picture quality? RE: Image aging without photoshop - Previous - 03-20-2012 Easy approach: View it on a DOS computer. Hard approach: Google for DOS image specifications and palette information, then try to make your image fit the DOS limitations. If you want to emulate the experience of viewing an image on a CRT monitor on a modern LCD/LED/TFT... I can't help you with that, scanlines, flickering, bent screen surface and all that are a direct effect of the physical structur of said monitor. RE: Image aging without photoshop - masteronion - 03-20-2012 I am not trying to Emulate it, I just want the picture quality to look low like I was viewing it on doss. Say, I use a game for example, any 16-bit game, and I took a picture of a level, let's say I rip out the walls and a room from the game. I want to make the image quality look older. RE: Image aging without photoshop - Vipershark - 03-20-2012 post the picture you want done RE: Image aging without photoshop - masteronion - 03-20-2012 (03-20-2012, 06:55 PM)Vipershark Wrote: post the picture you want done RE: Image aging without photoshop - Vipershark - 03-20-2012 so basically you're trying to do something like this...? RE: Image aging without photoshop - masteronion - 03-21-2012 (03-20-2012, 11:20 PM)Vipershark Wrote: so basically you're trying to do something like this...? YES except slightly more so than that. How do I do it? RE: Image aging without photoshop - puggsoy - 03-21-2012 (03-20-2012, 05:28 PM)Previous Wrote: Easy approach: View it on a DOS computer. Or just view it in DOSBox and use PrintScreen. Although I dunno how you view images in DOS RE: Image aging without photoshop - RétroX - 03-21-2012 MS Paint probably still has the ability to save to prehistoric 256-colour bitmaps. You could try that. RE: Image aging without photoshop - Vipershark - 03-21-2012 (03-21-2012, 02:45 PM)masteronion Wrote:(03-20-2012, 11:20 PM)Vipershark Wrote: so basically you're trying to do something like this...? I just reduced the color count down to the 16 colors used by MS-DOS. Save it in paint as a 16-color bmp file and it'll come out looking exactly like that. That's not the way that I did it (mine was a bit more complex) but it works the exact same way. RE: Image aging without photoshop - masteronion - 03-21-2012 But I need it below 16-bit though. RE: Image aging without photoshop - Skorpion - 03-21-2012 It's still a bit unclear as to what look you're going for. Would you be able to link us to an image of the look you're trying to achieve? Or tell us what you're using it for, so we could better understand what you want. Do you want it to be at a lower resolution/look pixelated? A specific number of colours? There are a lot of ways you can do stuff like that. What image editors do you have? Many will have things like the Posterize tool, or you can push the contrast on the image right up... (For reducing the number of colours used in the image.) Again, it's hard to offer a solution when I'm not entirely sure of the effect you want. RE: Image aging without photoshop - puggsoy - 03-22-2012 (03-21-2012, 05:17 PM)Vipershark Wrote: I just reduced the color count down to the 16 colors used by MS-DOS. Really? I would have thought it was more work than that. If I ever want to make a cool DOS-ish avatar (or other type of image) then I know what to do. RE: Image aging without photoshop - Vipershark - 03-22-2012 (03-21-2012, 08:24 PM)masteronion Wrote: But I need it below 16-bit though. In that case, I have no idea what you're asking for. Setting it to 16 bit reduces the color depth to the 16 colors that MS-DOS uses. It provides exactly the image I posted above, so if that's correct, what's the problem? RE: Image aging without photoshop - RétroX - 03-22-2012 People often seem to confuse 16-bit colour with images that are generated by a 16-bit processor. They're not the same. The NES had an 8-bit processor, but it only had 6-bit (64) colours. DOS also had 6-bit (64) colours, I believe. The SNES had 15-bit colour. |