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Originally Posted by noslenwerd Oh and i think you may have read my post about the chameleon paint wrong, and you may have thought i said camo  |
Well, you're right I thought camo because I've never heard of chameleon paint jobs before. That's a new technique to me. (I'm rather out of it.)
Anyway, I'd suggest some approach like this. Start with your base color picked out on the vehicle and create a selection of all the paint parts.
At that point I'd save the selection as an alpha channel by going to the Channels palette and using the button at the bottom which says 'save selection as channel' when you hold your cursor over it.
Then select the brush tool and use a soft brush (0% hardness) with a very low opacity. Pick your next color.
Make a new layer.
Paint your color on the new layer and start by changing your Blend mode in the Layers palette to Screen or Multiply. We're going into full experimentation mode here...
In 'full experimentation mode' try duplicating the layer on which you've painted to build up the color... several times even. Try different blend modes. Use Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur at a pretty high setting to even out the effect. Mess around with Levels and maybe Curves to increase highlights.
Quit while you are ahead!
Here's a quick experiment...