![]() ![]() Off - Opacity of the layer acts like normal, the dots get more transparent as opacity is reduced. I’m not entirely sure about these settings because I haven’t use them much. ![]() For the Brightness setting, the screentones act like normal, that is the space between the dots is transparent. In this example, the black bar is on a separate layer below the box.įor the Color setting, the screentones seem to affect other layers. The number of dots remains the same.ĭensity - Use color of image and Use brightness of image: these are the settings for converting an image into halftones. What it does is increasing/decreasing the size of the dots. Basically, density controls the value of the screentone. Since there are fewer dots, the dots are bigger so that the value is the same.ĭensity - Use specified density: this is the default setting when creating screentones. Low frequency - dots are further apart - fewer dots in the same area. ![]() High frequency - dots are closer to each other - more dots in the same area. Number of screen frequency controls the distance between the centers of the dots. I use CSP to apply tones because it has an inbuilt screentone function.Here are the basics: ![]()
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