Graphics Reference
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example. I needed to rotate the hue slightly so that only the color chips
in the bottom row were isolated. Also notice the hue width number
is much larger, which allowed us to select all nine of the bottom color
chips instead of just the three that were selected in the first example.
You can see this visually on the left vectorscope-like image in the UI,
which has expanded to cover a larger portion of the vectorscope. (The
small dot with the circle around it in the middle of the chosen vector
is the control point for moving the vector.) You can see in the Current
window at the upper-center of the UI that all of the color chips at the
bottom have been chosen.
If we were to rotate the hue one direction or another, we would dese-
lect some of the chips along the bottom and start to select chips going
up one side or the other of the ChromaDuMonde chart. In Figure 5.20 ,
the vector was swung towards blue. Notice that we haven't changed or
affected the colors in this example. We are simply defining a slightly dif-
ferent set of colors by rotating the hue.
Symphony also has a set of vectors called “custom vectors,” which are
basically the vector selections you create when you use the syringe or eye-
droppers to pick colors off of the source clip. Instead of looking like arcs
joined by straight lines, custom vectors are round or oval shaped. I created
a custom vector by clicking on the upper left skin tone color chip on the
ChromaDuMonde chart. (The color chips ringing the ChromaDuMonde
Fig. 5.20
 
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