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Hello,
I'm fairly new to Gimp, and have a project where I'd like to isolate some colors in a photo.
It is to hopefully reveal a hidden message.
I'm thinking I can remove some colors (maybe convert them to a specific color like white) so what's left are all colors except what I picked.
Thanks.
Paul
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Very unlikely that you can find a hidden message just by looking at specific colors. This is so dependent on the lighting used when you took the picture (direction, color temperature).
If you wan tot see grooves clearly, you to light the object from the size so that light rays are almost parallel to the surface. In the picture above the light is head on (and possibly a flash), exactly the opposite of what should be done.
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09-27-2019, 05:28 PM
(This post was last modified: 09-27-2019, 05:50 PM by Paulr.)
Hello Rich,
Thanks for your input.
The owner of the stone is very shy about revealing what sort of message is possibly engraved (or chiselled) in this stone. I don't know much about it.
I've tried the 3 color tools you mentioned without any great result (they worked technically but nothing was 'exposed' better).
I'll play with the bump map, as it appears interesting. Similar to the 3D scans I did before on the stone.
Offnuts: I tried 3D laser scanning (I'm a lot more familiar with this technology than image-editing) and even with 6 million points spaced at 0.01mm -0.1mm average, did not see much. The pits in the stone create a lot of noise and the 3D model looks like the usual orange peel so common with good quality scanners (they pick up too much detail).
And these point clouds are fairly large to work with (3D meshing et al.)
So I tried the optical approach. But as you mention, I may be able to see more shadows by applying what you said.
My photos were taken on a sunny day, in the back of a SUV.
Thanks.
Rich,
I tried bump mapping quickly, using the same image as map, and this gave me a fairly decent result.
I'm not a 'power-user'-far from it.
So I'll do as you said, use a B/W copy of the image as map.
The 'help' is pretty good on this topic.
I am impressed with this filter.
Thanks.