Ok, so my suggestions would be to replace the colors with something either flat or material (you can look up some palettes yourself, but here are 2 which I used quite a lot :
http://flatcolors.net/palettes.php and
My main suggestion is to remember that too bright of a color can take up your attention down to the keyboard. So even though you have these nice colors, they may take up your attention way too much. The best suggestion I have is to increase the dark grey in the color (in BTT).
I have been much more productive ever since. I suggest a color code like "blue for work" or "red for photos" etc... But really, with better colors you should feel a lot better.
Screenshot * OS: Void Linux x86_64 glibc * WM: cwm * BAR: lemonbar (only shows if anything is urgent) * SHELL: bash (until switched to mksh) * TERM: st * EDITOR: vim * IRC: ii * THEME: randomized from http://colormind.io * DOTS: https://github.com/Anachron/void (not up-to-date-yet)
Please also see my blog where I wrote about this setup in detail.
If you need something, ask and it shall be given to you!
People are just going to suggest yellow because they know what complimentary colours are and they think that makes them van gogh, but I'd try http://colormind.io/ to find something you think looks nice which is lighter.
Thank you so much! I'm glad to hear that because it took me forever to decide which colors to use!
As for choosing a color palette, I like to think about the overall theme of my drawing, the type of emotion/mood I want to convey, and which colors match my personal aesthetic/branding. It's always a good idea to have multiple versions of your drawing with different colors to see which one looks best.
And if you don't already have a custom palette saved onto Procreate, I recommend trying out Coolors and Colormind! I usually stick to the colors of my custom palette and make small modifications if I need to by changing the HSB and/or RGB values on Procreate.
I feel that. When I first started my campaign, I bought way too many minis at first, for every NPC and monster, and felt really pressured to finish them all really quickly. If it helps at all, I use this tool for color schemes: http://colormind.io/
If you're using a dark red, for instance, you can put a dark red that's similar to your paint color in one of the boxes, and click the lock to lock it down, then generate a scheme of complimentary colors based on that one. It's pretty helpful for getting the hang of colors and even feeling out color schemes you wouldn't have thought of.
Glad you like it! I used a free Photoshop alternative called "Krita" though any similar software (Gimp, Photoshop) should be able to handle it.
For the color scheme I found a picture that had the general atmosphere I wanted and ran it through a pallet generator called "colormind". I then only used these colors and black only for the line art.
I made a custom brush in Krita that was essentially just the default brush with a hatched texture to make it feel like a pencil. I used this for all the line work. The line work is on a multiply layer with 100% opacity. The walls, floor tiles, rubble and stairs lines are all different layers.
I then began coloring by creating layers filled with each color and adding a transparency mask. The mask makes it very easy to blend layers. I created the shadow by using the darkest color from my palette and adding box gradients to the transparency mask.
I added texture by using brushes on the transparency masks. I built up the detail with multiple layers.
I used a (cheap) Wacom tablet but it was mostly for the line art, if you don't have access I suggest sketching by hand and then scanning!
There are several colour palette combinators in the Internet. You chouse your colour block it and it will generate diferent colour combibation that can help you get inspired. It is whai i use when i get blocked.
http://colormind.io/bootstrap/
Hope it helps you
There arnt really colors that are better than any other. Each has specific uses. Id say you should first learn about the color wheel this link has alot of great information.
If I want to make my own color scheme I will usually pick two colors and fill in two boxes with said colors. I then go to Object>Blend>Make blend ( make sure specific step is on and not smooth color, can be checked in blend option menu) this will give you colors that have similar values to the two you have chosen.
If I am feeling particularly lazy or simply want a quick color scheme there are tons of website online that can help. I find that color mind works the best.
Color is a pretty complex subject and entire classes can be taught about it, but just some simple online reading can help you understand it better.
For design, simpicity can be a design choice. If you feel comfortable with just mounting your photos, doing a spot of journalling and calling it a day, that's perfectly fine. Here's a layout I made that was really just an excuse to play with different photo matting options.
Alternatively, you can "scraplift" layouts you like that aren't so simple or use layout "sketches". This basically means you incorporate some or many elements of an existing layout into your own work.
For color, you can experiement with interactive color wheels and pallette generators. You can either find a pallette you like and base your colors around that, or pick a color from your photo, background paper, embelishment, or pen colection and design you pallette around that.
Stick to a color palette. This site can help you: http://colormind.io/
I would merge the content from Software and Purchase pages into a single one. Something like "Software Licenses for Sale" and "Free Software". It is cumbersome to check some find a certain piece of software in the first tab and then having to check if it's priced or not.
The site looks dated. Maybe a framework like Bootstrap can do wonders to it?
Most tee signs are vomited up by people who have no idea what they are doing, so it's hard to find good examples. Really it's more a question of do you have a good eye for design or not. If you do, then you'll make good signs. They should be simple, clean, informational. With all the info in a sensible hierarchy (hole number first and largest, then distance, OB notes, sponsors). All in the same font (Helvetia to be safe) though you can get away with using a different font for the hole number if you so please. Keep info on flat background color of high contrast to font color. Colors should be simple and of a good scheme. Here's a simple website for choosing said scheme http://colormind.io/
hey !! in terms of color palettes i often use http://colormind.io/ and lock a 1-3 colors in adn then let them randomize the rest until I find a palette i would enjoy working with. And then flesh it out from there.
Alternatively. I use http://www.colourpod.com/ too. for color platte ideas.
The first one is the best as it has the most color contrast but I'd make her skin a bit more yellowish, for a consistent color palette. You can use websites like http://colormind.io/ to choose a color combination that looks more coherent. Very nice artwork btw!
Not enough information given about the tone of the company, weather its the happy chap, cool elegant or mysterious and dark.
On the link above is a colour generator, I locked 🔒 in dark red and grey tones. Then press genration. It was interesting exploring different vibes it gave through color change.
I think you should try different colors. http://colormind.io/ is a good site. Also, remove the blue thing in the hair, and use pen fade (right up finger) and set it to 100% end and 100% start
Paletton is good for exploring color combinations like adjacent colors and triads
Coolors is good at generating random palettes of 1-10 colors, and it also has a list of trending palettes to browse through that you can search by color or keywords such as 'fire' or 'dark'
Colormind has a generator similar to Coolors but only with 5 colors, however its cool feature is taking any image and generating a palette based on it
Looks cool! Lots of Math.rand haha.
It would be cool to use fetch to grab the color palette from something like this: http://colormind.io/api-access/
That way you can broaden your color options without adding extra overhead. Maybe there's something similar for SVGs?
Plain yellow: rgb(255, 255, 0)
I avoid it like the plague when I'm designing websites, shit's so hideous no self-respecting palette maker uses it. Don't @ me.
I would recommend http://colormind.io/ for color palettes.
A runner up would be https://color palettes.com/?utm_source=bypeople.com&utm_source=phplist865&utm_medium=email&utm_content=HTML&utm_campaign=Top+10+Handpicked+Freebies%3A+eBooks+Web+Developers%2C+Holographic+Textures%2C+CSS+Flexbox+Tools%2C+Fonts%2C+JS+Plugins+%26+More
I just came across Colormind which claims to be an AI powered color generator that gets info from pop culture, movies, etc. You get 5 colors, and can use the color-picker to choose any number of them to "lock" and it will pick colors that go with those. I'm not sure what relevance the order of the colors has, but it does seem to have some because if I move the locked colors to a different position it changes the generated ones.
Not sure if this is what you mean, but I found this site I bookmarked eons ago...
http://colormind.io/bootstrap/
Basically, input in the color combination and they show you how it looks on a Bootstrap site and on some sample UI components.
I personally think a nice gray or wine red would be great, but you could use something like this!
This website is a lifesaver for creating a nice color scheme, and finding out what accents would work!
Would it help to use online tools like palette generators or color wheels?
You'd pick one color and color science kicks back nice, coordinating colors.
The video was very entertaining, the only concern I have is your thumbnail, the color of your text is not complementing each other, try using http://colormind.io/ to see great color combination but other than that your video was great
The video was very entertaining, the only concern I have is your thumbnail, the color of your text is not complementing each other, try using http://colormind.io/ to see great color combination but other than that your video was great
Yes to getting rid of the bushes. Especially the ones tight to the house.
Unless you're willing to paint the brick or redo the shingles, those colors are where you start. Find a color palette you like that includes those colors (I like using this site but there are many websites) and repaint the siding and trim.
Take a drive around your neighborhood and try and identify landscape designs that a)trip your trigger and b) match the general layout of your property. For plants, I'd find an arboretum near you to pull names of plants you like. Check and see what local gardening clubs exist, they're full of plant nerds who can give good recommends.
They do look better. However, they still look pretty terrible. They do not go together, so the only reason it looks better is because it's not as bright.
I recommend going here and using one of those palettes instead of making your own.
Since you have a lot of flexibility in terms of colors, why don't you try making outfits using a color scheme generator? It's not always going to be a hit if it doesn't generate a color palette you like/own, but it might help reduce the stress of pairing outfits based on colors. The generator will challenge you to mix-and-match your colorful clothes in a cohesive, but unique way, rather than just wearing one colorful piece with a bunch of neutrals.
I like using http://colormind.io/ because its easy to use and you get the actual color value to plug into your website.
Someone posted http://colormind.io/ here a few days ago and it looks really good. It generates colour palettes for you, either completely from scratch or sprouting out of one or more colours you "lock in".
It also shows how you can use the palette in a real site which is quite neat.
I like http://colormind.io/
Although learning color theory was still invaluable as it gives you the freedom and confidence to deviate from the premade/generated palettes to get exactly what you want.
Its really quite a good execution for the first time.
CC:
Your color choice is questionable though. I'm not a fan of the highlighter yellowgreen sun.
I wouldn't grab colours for shading in a straight vertical line. Instead diagonally to lower saturation as it goes into the distance. Also a richer color up front.
The water stream also is too undersaturated and compared to the rest of the image almost feels reddish in tint.
One last thing would be the 2nd ridge. It shouldn't be darker than the frontmost hill.
Aside from that, it's really awesome to see your quick progress, I'd suggest limiting yourself to a color palette/scheme. If you can't seem to make one I'd suggest a color palette generator like Colorhunt.co, Colormind.io or Coolors.co
I agree with much of u/Pipberry's advice.
I personally like a more minimal, sleek tucked-in bedding as you seem to be going for here, but what you have now is a little army-barracks-like.
Because the bed is perpendicular to the way you'd naturally walk through the space, I would try to break it up into smaller horizontal chunks, such as with a nice wool blanket pulled up halfway to 2/3rds of the up the bed when made.
Likewise, I'd suggest a long bolster pillow for the head of the bed to further break it up and add horizontal movement. They're very comfortable for working in bed as well.
As far as colors go - pick your major art pieces and/or furniture first as it's easier to match bedding to those than the other way around. Download an app called Adobe Capture which will allow you to easily capture the fixed colors in your room (floor, couch, counter). Then once you have the HEX values for those colors you can plug them into a color palette generator online to get suggestions.
Thanks! I actually generated it on http://colormind.io. I might try my hand at my own color GAN in the future. That would enable me to plug it directly into my code and possibly walk through the color space. Until then, this site does a great job.
Although all of the pallets I've grabbed from there look good, I still find that certain pallets are better for certain applications.
http://colormind.io/ With this tool you can input, say, two most dominant colors from the logo, lock them, and it will use AI to give you the rest.
Otherwise, use all the colors from the logo for your pallette. It can be done professional y but takes effort.
See this: https://refactoringui.com/previews/building-your-color-palette/
Yep. I'm pretty color blind, so I either offload all those decisions to my wife or I trust pre-curated color groups.
You can also use some digital tools to generate color palettes. I like this one but if you google "color palette generator" there are tons.
I'm not great at colors. So, I really recommend a palette generator like ColorMind.io. Just generate a palette or pick a color or two and "lock" them in and it will generate harmonious colors to match.
I've just been going through Colormind.io finding nice colours. http://colormind.io/
Colormind is a deep learning AI that knows color theory. It can generate color palettes from scratch, or it can take your input and intelligently fill in the blanks