The colors of those kits worked perfectly with my NC and SC beach photos. The colors just screamed "beach" to me - from the color of the sand to the different colors of the water. The colors of the remix just don't cut it, and I don't want to spend a lot of time changing hue on them.
Oh well, that's money that I can spend on something else. Or not. As if I need anything else. If I made a digi LO a day for the next 3 years I'd never have to use the same file twice, so I really don't need to add much more.
digi question
Re: digi question
My 2 cents, FWIW. Make your own in the color you want.
I have not done this in a while, but as I recall, I grabbed the RGB colors from the Scrap Rap to get the color I wanted. I made a 12x12 of that color, for instance red from SIR . I like the texture on the Artifacts white. So I dragged in the white under that layer, then used multiply on the red layer. Voila a textured red that matches SIR colors.
Of course that doesn't give the images, but B&B scans can take care of that.
Edited to add, I miss the pure and beautiful colors from the paper kits.
I have not done this in a while, but as I recall, I grabbed the RGB colors from the Scrap Rap to get the color I wanted. I made a 12x12 of that color, for instance red from SIR . I like the texture on the Artifacts white. So I dragged in the white under that layer, then used multiply on the red layer. Voila a textured red that matches SIR colors.
Of course that doesn't give the images, but B&B scans can take care of that.
Edited to add, I miss the pure and beautiful colors from the paper kits.
Re: digi question
Yes! With Digital, you can do a lot to create a new paper by blending two others.bethrich wrote:My 2 cents, FWIW. Make your own in the color you want.
I have not done this in a while, but as I recall, I grabbed the RGB colors from the Scrap Rap to get the color I wanted. I made a 12x12 of that color, for instance red from SIR . I like the texture on the Artifacts white. So I dragged in the white under that layer, then used multiply on the red layer. Voila a textured red that matches SIR colors.
Of course that doesn't give the images, but B&B scans can take care of that.
Edited to add, I miss the pure and beautiful colors from the paper kits.
If you shop the Basic Gray digital store, you can buy the textures from their paper kits. Or you can get the patterns. I think that's pretty neat.