Transformations
Iconographer supports a set of simple transformations that can be applied to the current icon or selection. All of them can be access from the Transform sub-menu under the Edit menu. The first set of transformations are rotations. They rotate the current icon or selection 90 degrees in a clockwise or counter-clockwise direction. The next set of commands deal with horizontal and vertical flips. They mirror the image across the Y and X axes respectively. Finally, the Invert command changes the color to it's complement (e.g. blue becomes yellow, and vice-versa). Iconographer allows you to perform various color adjustments to the current icon or selection. You can change the hue and saturation, in addition to the brightness and contrast. All of these commands are accessed from the Adjust command, under the Edit menu. You can use the sliders to change any of the parameters. In addition, there is a checkbox, Real-time preview, which allows you to see the results while you're moving the sliders, instead of just at the end. Hue is the color of the image. By changing the hue, you are effectively shifting the colors across the spectrum. The saturation of the image is the purity of the color, with gray being the least saturated, and the color at 100% intensity being the most saturated. In addition, there is a colorize checkbox, which allows you to replace all of the colors in the icon or selection with the ones specified in the hue slider. The contrast of the image is the ratio between the brightest and darkest areas in an image. So, increasing the contrast increases this ratio, thus making the differences between dark and light areas more apparent. Brightness, as its name suggests, is the overall intensity of an image, so a very bright image would appear to be washed out while one with a low brightness would be dark. |