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  2. Filter Forge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filter_Forge

    Filter Forge is a computer graphics program for Windows and Mac that allows users to create procedural textures and modify images. It can be used as a standalone application or as a plugin for compatible 8bf hosts such as Adobe Photoshop, Affinity Photo, Corel PaintShop Pro. It has been under continuous development by Filter Forge OÜ (formerly ...

  3. Procedural texture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procedural_texture

    These kinds of textures are often used to model surface or volumetric representations of natural elements such as wood, marble, granite, metal, stone, and others. Usually, the natural look of the rendered result is achieved by the usage of fractal noise and turbulence functions [ definition needed ] .

  4. ImagineFX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImagineFX

    The magazine come with a DVD but has since switched to digital downloads that include the workshop files that relate to the tutorials in the magazine, program demos, free fonts, textures, images and Photoshop brushes. It also has small segments of traditional and 3D art.

  5. Affinity Photo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affinity_Photo

    Affinity Photo has been described as an Adobe Photoshop alternative, and is compatible with common file formats such as Adobe's PSD (including Photoshop Smart Objects). [9] [10] [11] Functionality includes RAW processing, color space options, live preview of effects, image stitching, alpha compositing, black point compensation, and optical aberration corrections. [2]

  6. Blend modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blend_modes

    The Photoshop and illusions.hu flavors also produce the same result when the top layer is pure white (the differences between these two are in how one interpolates between these 3 results). These three results coincide with gamma correction of the bottom layer with γ=2 (for top black), unchanged bottom layer (or, what is the same, γ=1; for ...

  7. Crystallographic texture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystallographic_texture

    Pole figures displaying crystallographic texture of gamma-TiAl in an alpha2-gamma alloy, as measured by high energy X-rays. [1] In materials science and related fields, crystallographic texture is the distribution of crystallographic orientations of a polycrystalline sample. A sample in which these orientations are fully random or is amorphous ...

  8. Bump mapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bump_mapping

    Bump mapping [1] is a texture mapping technique in computer graphics for simulating bumps and wrinkles on the surface of an object. This is achieved by perturbing the surface normals of the object and using the perturbed normal during lighting calculations. The result is an apparently bumpy surface rather than a smooth surface, although the ...

  9. Normal mapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_mapping

    In 3D computer graphics, normal mapping, or Dot3 bump mapping, is a texture mapping technique used for faking the lighting of bumps and dents – an implementation of bump mapping. It is used to add details without using more polygons . [ 1 ]