I'm the one who picked the shadow color and I don't care what people do with it. If that's all you use I don't even care if I get credit. If it were something like Coca-Cola Red that's tied up with my brand identity and has marketing money tied in to get just the right emotional response, then sure, I'd want my colors to be protected under copyright, but for something like this where I just played with sliders and percentages until it didn't look awful, it's not an issue.
HOWEVER, the colors might be a part of LPC's brand identy, so I'll leave it up to Bart if those colors should only be used for LPC artworks.
I prefer the people who notice it give the friendly reminder and only contact me if it's something that needs my involvement to be resolved. Otherwise I'd be spending every waking moment protecting my copyright and getting pretty angry that people can't follow a simple "give me credit" rule.
Okay, don't know if this will help, but this is how I make a tile for something that isn't pixels. You'll need a program that supports layers to do this
Step 1: Make the body of the texture. I only do a center, taking care not to hit the edges of the document.
Step 2: Make a copy of the texture and move it halfway up, then move the original texture halfway down. If it's not exactly halfway, it won't work. You now have a new center to make a texture in. Fill in the hole. Remember not to touch the edges.
Step 3: Do the same thing again, only horizontally.
Step 5: If necessary repeat step 2. Try out the texture, fix problems. (This part will depend entirely on how you made
Here's what I've done for the day. I was feeling uninspired so I looked up sillouettes, the ones of churches were the most interesting to me.
Aw, thanks! I think the tiling would be more obvious on a larger screen, but I'm really happy with how it turned out. I love the night sky.
Wow, that's awesome!
Ooops, totally forgot to enter this one. I kept putting it off because what I had done wouldn't compete and I wanted to do something better. Oh well!
Oh, a collab would be fun. I'll try to catch you on IRC soon.
No! I'm sorry I stole yours! Please, vote for Caeles! You are not allowed to withdraw your entry, seriously!
I think I'll do something related to the mind. Not sure what yet.
I'm the one who picked the shadow color and I don't care what people do with it. If that's all you use I don't even care if I get credit. If it were something like Coca-Cola Red that's tied up with my brand identity and has marketing money tied in to get just the right emotional response, then sure, I'd want my colors to be protected under copyright, but for something like this where I just played with sliders and percentages until it didn't look awful, it's not an issue.
HOWEVER, the colors might be a part of LPC's brand identy, so I'll leave it up to Bart if those colors should only be used for LPC artworks.
I prefer the people who notice it give the friendly reminder and only contact me if it's something that needs my involvement to be resolved. Otherwise I'd be spending every waking moment protecting my copyright and getting pretty angry that people can't follow a simple "give me credit" rule.
Okay, don't know if this will help, but this is how I make a tile for something that isn't pixels. You'll need a program that supports layers to do this
Step 1: Make the body of the texture. I only do a center, taking care not to hit the edges of the document.
Step 2: Make a copy of the texture and move it halfway up, then move the original texture halfway down. If it's not exactly halfway, it won't work. You now have a new center to make a texture in. Fill in the hole. Remember not to touch the edges.
Step 3: Do the same thing again, only horizontally.
Step 5: If necessary repeat step 2. Try out the texture, fix problems. (This part will depend entirely on how you made
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