If you've done it right, the color will lay over the blank area perfectly/cleanly without it either bleeding into the other dyable areas OR only so faintly it wouldnt be nearly as badly noticeable as this.
Still, I'm sure they were just trying to rush shit out as fast as possible to meet a deadline
February 6, 2026 at 10:46 AM
If you've done it right, the color will lay over the blank area perfectly/cleanly without it either bleeding into the other dyable areas OR only so faintly it wouldnt be nearly as badly noticeable as this.
Still, I'm sure they were just trying to rush shit out as fast as possible to meet a deadline
I would use magic wand to get the outline of the shape of the dyed portion, invert the selection, use the fill tool to color it in, then use a soft gaussian blur to remove the jaggies of the color. Next I would duplicate that blurred layer 2-3 times b4 combining them all down onto the final layer.
February 6, 2026 at 10:46 AM
I would use magic wand to get the outline of the shape of the dyed portion, invert the selection, use the fill tool to color it in, then use a soft gaussian blur to remove the jaggies of the color. Next I would duplicate that blurred layer 2-3 times b4 combining them all down onto the final layer.
Yeah, a lot of it comes down to your genes, but with hard work and determination anyone can get swole eventually!! Im lucky cause I can get mass/definition fast/easy and retain most of it even without much maintenance - but Ive beeb wastin it by being lazy (plus ykno chronic pain+fatigue)
February 6, 2026 at 12:34 AM
Yeah, a lot of it comes down to your genes, but with hard work and determination anyone can get swole eventually!! Im lucky cause I can get mass/definition fast/easy and retain most of it even without much maintenance - but Ive beeb wastin it by being lazy (plus ykno chronic pain+fatigue)