BREAKING NEWS
LATEST POSTS
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Paul d’Herbermont – Nuke HDRI model detection with TorchScript
A tool that detects, crops, and presents reference & cg spheres
https://www.patreon.com/posts/nuke-auto-ai-96524139
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Nuke KnobScripter v3 – Full Tool Overview
Website link: https://lnkd.in/dr7Xv5C9
Nukepedia: https://lnkd.in/dfRuVtJ8
Github: https://lnkd.in/drXeHcn
FEATURED POSTS
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Qwen-Image-Edit – Free open-source image editor
https://docs.comfy.org/tutorials/image/qwen/qwen-image-edit
https://huggingface.co/QuantStack/Qwen-Image-Edit-GGUF
Qwen-Image-Edit is the image editing version of Qwen-Image. It is further trained based on the 20B Qwen-Image model, successfully extending Qwen-Image’s unique text rendering capabilities to editing tasks, enabling precise text editing. In addition, Qwen-Image-Edit feeds the input image into both Qwen2.5-VL (for visual semantic control) and the VAE Encoder (for visual appearance control), thus achieving dual semantic and appearance editing capabilities.
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A Brief History of Color in Art
www.artsy.net/article/the-art-genome-project-a-brief-history-of-color-in-art
Of all the pigments that have been banned over the centuries, the color most missed by painters is likely Lead White.
This hue could capture and reflect a gleam of light like no other, though its production was anything but glamorous. The 17th-century Dutch method for manufacturing the pigment involved layering cow and horse manure over lead and vinegar. After three months in a sealed room, these materials would combine to create flakes of pure white. While scientists in the late 19th century identified lead as poisonous, it wasn’t until 1978 that the United States banned the production of lead white paint.
More reading:
www.canva.com/learn/color-meanings/https://www.infogrades.com/history-events-infographics/bizarre-history-of-colors/