
Free plugin alien skin eye candy 4000 v4.0 Download free plugin alien skin eye candy 4000 v4.0 この広告は45日以上更新がないブログに表示されております。 新しい記事を書くことで広告を消すことができます。. Iar embedded workbench for renesas rl78 keygen windows 7.
Jimmy Brunet wrote: Will this work with PSP7? Jimmy, Yes it will. Here are a some extracts from the readme that comes with the download: 'Eye Candy 4000 is a powerful collection of special-effects filters that provides instant relief from deadline stress. In the demo version of Eye Candy 4000, three of the twenty-three filters are fully functional: Glass, Marble and Shadowlab allow you to preview and apply effects on your artwork. You may preview, but not apply effects created with the other twenty filters.
Eye Candy 4000 requires one of these hosts: Photoshop 4.0 or later, Fireworks 2 or later (filters work as 'Live Effects' in Fireworks 3 and 4), Corel Photo-Paint 8 or later or Jasc Paint Shop Pro 5.0 or later. Alien Skin only supports Eye Candy 4000 with programs on this host list. We recommend that you do not attempt to use Eye Candy 4000 with other programs. Eye Candy 4000 requires either a PowerPC processor running Mac OS System 8.6 or later or a Pentium II (or later) processor running Windows 98/NT 4/2000/Me with at least 32 MB of physical RAM and a color monitor with 24-bit or greater video card Eye Candy 3.1 Eye Candy 3 only works Adobe Photoshop 3.0.4 or later versions, JASC Paint Shop Pro 5.0 or later, Deneba Canvas 6.0 or later, Corel Photo-Paint 9.0 or later, Macromedia Fireworks 2.0 or later. We do not recommend that you attempt to use Eye Candy 3 with any other programs. The Macintosh version of Eye Candy 3 only works with PowerPC processors.'
--Regards,Robin [Redbreast].
In the world of image editing, Adobe Photoshop has become a platform unto itself—it’s certainly much more than a single application. A thriving cottage industry of plug-ins, filters, and actions has emerged around Photoshop’s architecture, and today there are supplemental plug-ins or actions for nearly every need, interest, and user level.
In this review, I look at a variety of Photoshop plug-ins: Akvis’s Enhancer 2.0, which reclaims detail in shadows and highlights; Alien Skin Software’s Eye Candy 5: Nature, a plug-in that lets you add naturalistic special effects to objects; and nik multimedia’s Color Efex Pro 2.0, a set of tools that mimic—and in some cases surpass—traditional photographic lens filters. These products are designed to work within Photoshop, but they also work with a variety of other imaging programs that adhere to Photoshop’s plug-in standard, such as Adobe Photoshop Elements 3.0 and Macromedia Fireworks MX 2004.
Enhancer 2.0 You can’t always be in the perfect position to shoot a photo, and sometimes you also don’t have enough time to choose the proper camera settings for the available light. Too often, the disappointing result is that either the important part of your photo is in a shadow or the whole picture looks hazy. Akvis’s Enhancer 2.0 fixes these problems by revealing detail in both shadow and highlight areas without blowing out highlights or plugging up shadows. Amazingly, it works. Akvis says that Enhancer intensifies color transitions, thus strengthening the difference between adjacent pixels in color gradations. That means you can dramatically improve most photos, especially those in which strong light falls behind your subject, casting a shadow. Besides enhancing shadow and highlight detail, Enhancer can also improve details in a photo’s midtone areas, making it an effective tool for sharpening an otherwise well-exposed photo.
In my tests, it provided an added punch that was especially beneficial for photos of industrial objects such as buildings, bridges, and vehicles. Because of the algorithms Enhancer uses, it’s also extremely effective at removing the haze that sometimes shows up in a photo (haze is usually the result of nonoptimal camera settings). Enhancer’s preview window provides just three slider bars in an easy-to-use interface; you can quickly improve a photo through simple trial and error. Unfortunately, since you can’t type values directly into the dialog box, and you can’t save settings for future use, you’ll wind up doing extra work if you cancel out of the dialog box or if you want to use the same settings on multiple pictures. While the program’s Before and After buttons are handy for quickly viewing the effect of your changes, the preview window is not resizable, nor can you zoom in.