Tweak tweak tweak
Apr. 9th, 2004 10:01 amFinally found a good hex color chart and modified my journal - whee! I've been wanting to do that since I set it up... the red in particular was annoying me. Still don't quite understand the logic behind the codes, but it's a start. (Usually the first thing I do with a new computer is customize the desktop pallette - once I custom-mixed all the colors to match my furniture. Yes, I know I'm sick.) I may tweak it a bit more later but I feel much better now. However, in the process I've somehow gone from "running early" to "running late," so I'd better go get a few things done. Let me know what you think of the new colors! :-)
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Date: 2004-04-09 03:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-04-10 10:28 pm (UTC)I knew you'd changed your name a couple times, but not that you'd deleted the journals entirely... what happens if you want to look back at something?
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Date: 2004-04-11 07:49 am (UTC)http://www.livejournal.com/users/pressburger/1578.html
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Date: 2004-04-11 03:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-04-11 07:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-04-13 10:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-04-14 04:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-04-21 06:58 am (UTC)P.S.: Hi!
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Date: 2004-04-21 10:08 pm (UTC)Hi to you, too! :-)
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Date: 2004-04-22 06:56 am (UTC)You know, it's taken me a sec to remember how I *did* come up with the codes... but it was like this: This userpic was originally b/w, and I had sepia-toned it in Photoshop previously. When I wanted to work up a color scheme around that photo, I opened it back up in Photoshop and used the eyedropper tool to pick out some pixels of contrasting shades that were already present in the photo (this is a trick from one of the design mags I subscribe to). I made up a palette with 7-8 squares of single colors, light to dark, so I could see how they related to each other in larger samples. Then, the eyedropper tool also handily gave me the RGB codes for each color, so I could plug different combinations out of that palette into the journal stylesheet and see how they came out until I got something I was happy with.
... Wow, do I feel geeky now. :-}
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Date: 2004-04-24 11:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-04-27 08:42 am (UTC)It specs RGB colors in standard HTML syntax, which is six digits prefixed by a # sign. The digit pairs are the hex codes for the desired levels of red, green, and blue, in that order.
The available hex range for each color is from 00 to FF (or, for those of us unused to thinking in hexadecimal, 0 to 255, yielding 256 possible levels). So #FF0000 is pure red, #00FF00 pure green (at least, of the shade that the "green" pixels in your monitor produce), and #0000FF pure blue. #000000 is pure black (none of the pixels are lit up) and #FFFFFF is pure white (all of the pixels are lit at 100%, producing the maximum available level of white light). Adjusting the combinations up or down produces all the other available visible shades on your monitor.
Of course there's lots more info around on the RBG color space. :-)
*geek geek geek*
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Date: 2004-04-27 10:23 pm (UTC)(And, great article! I couldn't find any reference on that site for converting to hex, though.)
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Date: 2004-04-28 06:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-04-29 10:50 pm (UTC)