Comments: 17
GABINCUBUS [2012-03-03 00:53:14 +0000 UTC]
Hahaha this is way too cool
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Raverine-1013 [2007-09-17 07:15:12 +0000 UTC]
awesome I love it!!
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Gunblade-Specialist [2006-01-10 21:05:45 +0000 UTC]
Very nice vibra....errr i mean iPod ^ ^;;
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teapot-phx [2006-01-09 04:08:57 +0000 UTC]
That Ipod is suspiciously close to her inner thigh... But it very well done! I give ya that.
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x-hex-x In reply to teapot-phx [2006-01-09 16:53:59 +0000 UTC]
well, really, all I did was replace the gun she was holding with an iPod ^_^ no violence... wait.. that takes all the fun out of it .-. aw...
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teapot-phx In reply to x-hex-x [2006-01-09 23:17:09 +0000 UTC]
yah it does.... How could you!?! Oh well... maybe if she starts brake dancing it'll be fun again...
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x-hex-x In reply to teapot-phx [2006-01-10 01:36:34 +0000 UTC]
that'd be awsome *L* I wish I had the program to do that...
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teapot-phx In reply to x-hex-x [2006-01-10 01:56:46 +0000 UTC]
You 'n me both sista.
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hitokirivader In reply to x-hex-x [2006-01-09 23:12:43 +0000 UTC]
Raster and vector are two different ways of storing image data. Photoshop and Illustrator both handle both forms (which is why they always say that anything you can do in one program you can do in the other), but Photoshop is better designed to handle raster and Illustrator is better designed to handle vector. Raster data stores all the pixel colors and organizes them in different ways (like jpeg, bmp, gif, tiff, etc.), while vector data stores lines, angles, curves, and shapes in a mathematical format (like fonts). Incidentally, if you increase the scale of a vector image drastically, you've still got a decent image; increase the scale of a raster image and you see pixelation. Rasterizing something like text for example will allow it to be manipulated and put through filters.
Hope that clears things up a bit.
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x-hex-x In reply to hitokirivader [2006-01-10 01:16:40 +0000 UTC]
oh... well how I did it is I did it in Illustrator, saved it and such. Then I Print Screened it, pasted it into a Photoshop image to save it as a JPG so I could post it on here. I guess that's why it might be a little grainy.
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hitokirivader In reply to x-hex-x [2006-01-10 01:50:06 +0000 UTC]
Yeah, I don't think there's a conventional way to get Illustrator files directly to jpg. The stuff I did in Illustrator in my gallery I took from screenshots as well.
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