The following answer if from my previous answers concerning the Anaglyph effect. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvTMv90GO… is one way of turning a regular photo into an anaglyph image. This isn't technically a "glow" effect. This is the Anaglyph or 3D effect better viewed with Red and Cyan 3D glasses. Not trying to correct :( . I just know it helps to know the name of an effect if I need to find a tutorial. Yep Gimp can do this too. For us it is click stereo/click make anaglyph/move one layer over slightly and then merge down and save. Could also do the perspective as suggested in that tutorial to help it along. In respect to the layered wolf head the addition of turning down the opacity of the new layers helped a lot.
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;… is another one of my answers from a few days ago that I also included an example in. Hope it turns out the way you wanted it to. If not you know where to find me. Huh ? wha? You don't? OK. goergedave@yahoo.com
Oh ok So get Gimp http://download.cnet.com/GIMP/3000-2192_4-10073935.html http://registry.gimp.org/node/6527 right click that SCM and click save link as/save target then save it to C:\Users\Owner\.gimp-2.6\scripts /and or C:\Program Files\GIMP-2.0\share\gimp\2.0\scripts depending on how your preferences are set up in Gimp. When that is done open Gimp click on File and open your image. Hold CTRL and tap L. This will open your LAYER dialogue if it wasn't open. On the bottom of that box click on the duplicate icon. Click on STEREO then MAKE ANAGLYPH. Click on your move tool and move one of the images slightly to the left. I move the blue layer. You do this by clicking the 4 sided arrow icon in your big tool box. Click on image in your MENU BAR up top and click on flatten image. Save it.
Mike1942f
2011-01-24 09:17:18 UTC
Actually, the images are magenta (a purplish red) and cyan (a greenish blue) and to get real 3D you need to have 2 images that were taken by camera lenses a few inches apart - like your eyes.
If you add the right colors to a single picture, you can get some weird effects, but hard to control
Without adding the colors, you can increase the 3D appearance of some pictures by using the Sharpen effect and increasing the contrast so edges become sharper and background becomes darker.
Lutty
2016-02-25 06:03:14 UTC
Why would you want to do that??? Does it matter? I just tried to do this with Corel's Paint Shop Photo Pro X3 (PSP). In PSP I click Image > Split to RGB. That produces (from a color photo) 3 monochrome images of the original, aptly named Red, Green, and Blue. I then shift the Red to the right a few pixels then shift the Blue to the left a few pixels. I then click Image > Combine RGB and PSP ask's me which images to combine, I choose the Red, Green and Blue images and I have to uncheck the Sync Blue and Green to Red, otherwise it will realign the images and I'll have exactly what I started with. If you have photoshop you can do this as well, but I don't know the exact key strokes. PSP doesn't do anything that Photoshop does. This is a fake 3D effect. With a real 3D camera you'd have a larger shift with things that are further away and less with things closer. What you've linked too works as there's nothing in the background.
Squidmaster
2011-01-24 08:46:28 UTC
A specialist program would be needed. Photoshop doesn;t have this filter in yet, but you'd need something specialised.
And its not just a case of putting red and GREEN lines around things. A picture needs to be seperated into layers which are coloured red and green, and then displaced so that when viewed through the right lenses they take on a degree of depth of field.
anonymous
2014-08-20 09:41:29 UTC
Here you can find a free download of GIMP: [link]
GIMP is a free program you can use for a bunch ot tasks like photo retouching, image authoring and image composition. In my opinion it is the best free photo editing software on the market. It's not as powerful as photoshop, but it's free and can be augmented with plugins and extensions. These features make it the most advanced free photo-retouching software. GIMP can be used as a simple paint program or a complex image-manipulation software (thanks also to to a very advanced scripting interface)
anonymous
2014-07-29 23:25:10 UTC
No questions asked, the best site for Photoshop tutorials is: http://www.photoeditinglessons.com
All tutorials are in video format, which makes them easier for you to follow along with the instructor. The videos are interactive and very easy to follow, this will help you learn piano three times faster. Good Luck!
anonymous
2014-07-26 13:51:04 UTC
Hi there,
GIMP is the free versions of photoshop. You can use it to edit your picts. There is a free download here http://j.mp/1zbmz5p
I have been using it for years
Hope it helps.
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2016-04-22 02:59:41 UTC
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2016-02-17 00:39:52 UTC
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