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Posted

One problem I notice a lot is inconsistency in coloration of scenes. The recent contrast/saturation/brightness controls I added help a bit, but I think the original texture data has to be consistent. If you look at most AAA games, their textures somehow have a uniform appearance, and they just look like they belong together. Unfortunately, we seem to have a lot of problems doing this.

 

Here is the palette from the game "Quake":

palette.gif

 

And an example of consistent textures, even if it is a little extreme:

 

FC2__PAK9_01.jpg

 

Here's an idea I had that might help with this problem:

 

First, you define a palette of colors. Maybe this can be a 32x32 image with different browns, greens, blues, etc. for each pixel. It doesn't matter what order they are in. You just define some colors that look good together.

 

This programs loads this image and reads the pixels into different possible values. They can be converted to HSL and stored.

 

Then the program starts loading a directory of textures, recursively. For each image found, it does the following:

 

For each pixel of an image, it converts the pixel to HSL. Then it compares the pixel hue and saturation to the values of the palette, and finds the closest match. Then it saves a new copy of the image, using the replaced hue and saturation values, and retaining the original brightness value.

 

You could use this to make all your greens look similar. It might automatically create a consistent color theme, something that we developers seem to have a very hard time with. If you don't like the results, edit your palette image and re-run the application.

 

I don't have time to write something like this, but I thought I would put the idea out there.

  • Upvote 1

My job is to make tools you love, with the features you want, and performance you can't live without.

Posted

Solutions like that result in loss of resolution, which is why things start looking washed out instead of warm. We want consistency of similar hues, not a loss of resolution.

 

Notice the colors are different, but look somehow consistent:

transformers-the-game-screenshot-big.jpg

 

Here's a good example of "random colors syndrome":

2029.jpg

 

Here is the same image multiplied by an orange tint. This looks like a lot of the screenshots I have seen. Even though the tint sort of forces it to look consistent, there is a loss of resolution and the odd colors still look odd:

 

post-1-12621227445257_thumb.jpg

 

Relying too much on colored lighting only washes out detail and makes everything look muddy.

My job is to make tools you love, with the features you want, and performance you can't live without.

Posted

I like the idea, except the part of "First, you define a palette of colors". This is where people are most likely going to fail. If it wasn't for that, I'd code it.

Posted

I also agree that if the issue is partly to help programmers get a more consistent color, as a programmer I would most likely fail at making a color palette that is worth anything.

 

I would be interested in seeing the results of something like this though.

Posted

I attempted to make a color palette. First step: Google. Then, GIMP. I came up with this palette from that tropical picture:

 

dart_tropical_islands_vol__desktop_screen_savers-62.jpeg

 

Palette.png Kind of tiny. Scale it up if you want.

 

 

Could start coding it now.

Posted

Ha, that is brilliant! You could start with a photo and have a program that enters all the unique values into an image to make the palette. ;)

 

Here's my attempt. I just resized the image (using pixel resize, so there is no blending of colors). I scaled it back up so it was easier to see.

 

post-1-12621258520475_thumb.jpeg

My job is to make tools you love, with the features you want, and performance you can't live without.

Posted

Started working on it. So far done: UI, palette loading from any format (including DDS, JPG, PNG, GIF, TGA, and whatnot), HSL values storing. I hope I'll be able to code something that creates a palette from an image for you.

Posted

Ha, that is brilliant! You could start with a photo and have a program that enters all the unique values into an image to make the palette. ;)

 

Here's my attempt. I just resized the image (using pixel resize, so there is no blending of colors). I scaled it back up so it was easier to see.

 

post-1-12621258520475_thumb.jpeg

I would offer different modes.

  • Optimize palette for 256, 512, 1024, etc colors
  • Create palette from all unique colors at raw resolution
  • Create palette from all unique colors after resizing to 16x16, 32x32, etc
  • Any other suggestion?

Posted

You might want to start with a simple hard-coded app to see if this idea actually works, before you start adding a UI. I have no idea if the results will be useful or not.

My job is to make tools you love, with the features you want, and performance you can't live without.

Posted

You might want to start with a simple hard-coded app to see if this idea actually works, before you start adding a UI. I have no idea if the results will be useful or not.

 

Fortunately I have no life to waste, so I don't mind if it doesn't.

Posted

I like main Idea. most of times I paint my textures by myself in same level, as possible as I can. its easy enough for me. :( and when I need a new color scheme, I will use Color Scheme Designer.

 

If I could rate this feature, I would say:

Feature status to: Useful

Feature severity to: 1 - Low

:D

Omid Saadat

OD Arts Blog

 

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Posted

I agree that this is low priority but I do like the basic idea of being able to substitute texture colours with those from a consistent color palette as that may help us fellow programmers get a somewhat more consistent feel to our scenes. However, whether this would prove effective in practice remains to be seen but it's a nice idea. Good luck with this Ubu as I think it's worth exploring.

Intel Core i5 2.66 GHz, Asus P7P55D, 8Gb DDR3 RAM, GTX460 1Gb DDR5, Windows 7 (x64), LE Editor, GMax, 3DWS, UU3D Pro, Texture Maker Pro, Shader Map Pro. Development language: C/C++

Posted

Could this tool be used to change color schemes at will? If so it would be very handy if you are experimenting to get the right look.

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Posted

@Marcus: Although I'm a programmer, I have an extensive knowledge of colors and palettes as well. Making matching colors for my own assets wouldn't be hard at all, except I don't always get assets from the same location.

@Davaris: Recoloring images in real-time based on a palette is practically impossible.

Posted

I like main Idea. most of times I paint my textures by myself in same level, as possible as I can. its easy enough for me. :blink: and when I need a new color scheme, I will use Color Scheme Designer.

 

If I could rate this feature, I would say:

Feature status to: Useful

Feature severity to: 1 - Low

:D

 

 

Also programmers who can't get afford an artist will be buying assets from lots of different places, so something like this will make their scenes look like they were made by the same artist. If this works like the picture Josh posted, it will be terrific.

Win 7 Pro 64 bit

AMD Phenom II X3 720 2.8GHz

GeForce 9800 GTX/9800 GTX+

4 GB RAM

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

After having a long break from coding private stuff i have worked today on small app that creates palettes from a source image

and converts a given image to use this palette as a base. This is the current result:

 

The palette: (taken from the weapon image in the first post)

paletteMain.png

 

And the result of the convertation:

result-1.jpg

  • Windows 10 Pro 64-Bit-Version
  • NVIDIA Geforce 1080 TI
Posted

Nice result.

 

You know, there should be a paint applications that stores color as an entry in a palette, and lets you redefine the palette. Maybe there already is.

My job is to make tools you love, with the features you want, and performance you can't live without.

  • 2 months later...
Posted

ok . i have my post-shader done

i will send it there, you can make screenshot of your game, load in into photoshop, edit colours as you wish, save gradient map of colours .. whoalaa ;-) Your scene is realisticaly coloured ! and It's fast.

 

 

There is no need for contract/saturate/light shader .. because this can do everything :) You can tune everything with photoshop colour curves.

 

preparing demo....

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