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We had some great images and interpretations of our last Loch Ness challenge. Thanks to all who took part.
This week, rather than a scene, we have a spanner, or wrench for those on the western side of the atlantic ocean.
How creative you can get with this spanner?
The “rules”:
To download the image below, hover over the image and click on the circle with the arrows at the top right.
Then, when the image opens in its own window, right click and choose “Save Image As/Save Target As” (or similar depending on your browser).
When posting back your image — please use the blue reply button in this first post and use the 'Insert Photos' icon at the top of the reply box. If posting a comment on someone else’s entry, then please use the grey reply button next to their image post.
Have fun!
Dave
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Trevor, I try to always read through, and yet often need to edit in any case, especially in longer posts and those with complicated instructions.
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I understood what Trevor was saying - as least the way I undertood it was:
Dean - your implementation is clever and funny 🙂
Thanks Trevor.
And for AI - does have an odd distortion about how it represents certain things. Thought it worked for this somewhat abstract story. I don't know what the spots on the able are, what they are eating and is that an insect on teh top left of the table and left of the candle?
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There is so often that abstract look to images, plus the obvious problems with people's hands and other appendages. Sometimes they look odd, but sometimes there can be too many of them.
HEY, BTW Colin Smith has put up an excellent video with tips and tricks on Gen Fill. Much better than the Matt Kloskowski e-book that Jim is sharing on ProDesignTools. I picked up a couple of good tips including how to use Gen Fill to add your own image element (like a person) to an image with convincing background. Hmmm... I was going to try that but forgot. I'll go try it out.
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After linking to the excellent PhotoshopCafe video, I am pleased to see that Jesus Rameriz is posting again — he took a wee break to get married 🙂 and today's upload is stellar.
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It shouldn't work, but it does Dean 🙂
Dave
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A bouquet of wrenches for your loved one
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I guess that must be the 'heavy plant crossing' that I keep seeing on road signs 🙂
Dave
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It fits in well with the rest of teh tools, but I'm trying to work out what is in the ring ?
Dave
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Dave, I'm remembering the hundreds of times you've told us that rust, dents, and scratches make an image realistic, but your spanner looks brand new and right out of the box! Here's a wrench my dad gave me when I was 18 and left home to go to college.
Your Photoshop Challenge, if you choose to accept it, is to age your spanner so it looks real! 😊
Jane
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If that 'M' means it was a metric spanner, then your dad might have thought it wouldn't fit anything inside the American border. A lot of the American engineering and woodwork YouTube channels get into all sorts of arguments over America's apparent inability to embrace the metric system. One of the most bizarre things I've ever seen on YouTube was when Stumpy Nubs reviewed a digital caliper that displayed fractions.
I was an apprentice toolmaker when the UK moved to metric, and can happily work with both systems (I still sometimes think in feet and inches), but every single one of the many machine tools I've used had slides calibrated in decimal.
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Trevor, my wrench is from his very old Ford that my mother refused to ride in and he used to commute to his job as a university professor before we moved to D.C. It had running boards.
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Running boards? Now I have a picture in my head of those souped up prerunners of NASCAR who raced along the dirt roads of Virginia, loaded with moonshine, and chased by Revenue agents.
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Trevor, at first glance I quite liked the inch fraction, but you are right: it is really bizarre.
I still tend to think feet and inches in connexion with wood and similar (such as plyboo) as in the old days, which go back to when the right size of the unit could be (re)established any Sunday,
But what I really sorrow over is the Dreadful Day, 15th February 1971.
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I was an apprentice toolmaker when the UK moved to metric
By @Trevor.Dennis
Now that they left the EU, will they go back to Imperial Units as one of the big achievements of the Brexit?
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Not a chance - the decision to go metric was made in 1965, the UK joined the EU in 1973.
That said, we have a strange mix of metric and Imperial here in the UK. We buy petrol (gas) in litres but talk about fuel consumption in miles per gallon. Orange juice is sold in litres but beer in pints. Car wheel diameters are in inches, but the distance from rim to rim on the tyres is in mm.:-)
Dave
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Car wheel diameters are in inches, but the distance from rim to rim on the tyres is in mm.:-)
By @davescm
That's also in real Europe like this… 😉 And for the beer, you can sell it in any measure. We have the “Humpen”, “Klensch”, “Stiwwel”, “Flütte”, “Mini”. 😉
(Thinking about: we have all kinds of designations, but nobody will ask for one Litre of beer…)
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Like this?
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That's a very decent rust texture. I'm guessing that its Multiply and maybe Curves to lighten it up? I't working well whatever you used.
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The texture is AI generated. I'm getting lazy. It's really a straight multiply:
2 minutes, indeed faster than my “official” entry.
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That made me laugh Dave. The sad thing is I know how that spanner feels.
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I'm laughing too, Dave, that's so clever! 🤣
Jane
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We knew Chromium. Now it goes vanadium…
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Hah! It took me a moment to get this. 🙂