Just to be clear, gcolor2 (well, gcolor actually) defines itself as a "color selector intended to make finding pleasing foreground/background colors for text mode apps quick and painless" and agave defines itself as "a very simple application...that allows you to generate a variety of color schemes from a single starting color".
every see one of those websites where the colours are aweful or don't match? there is a logic to colors working together and these programs help you create a pleasing colour palette. On Sun, Jul 29, 2012 at 9:46 AM, Len Ovens <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Sun, July 29, 2012 6:58 am, Eric Hedekar wrote: > > > My go-to color picker is gcolor2 and would highly recommend this one to > be > > picked for such a task. > > I also see that Agave is no longer shipped with the graphics package > > (silly > > IMHO, but I mean no offense) this could also be a realistic option. I'm > > not sure which would be a better selection between Agave and gcolor2 (it > > depends on your task). > > If you were looking for one of these applications, would you expect to > find it in a publishing or graphics submenu? > > -- > Len Ovens > www.OvenWerks.net > > > -- > Ubuntu-Studio-devel mailing list > [email protected] > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-devel > good question, Len. of course, i am going to say that it depends on what this application is being used to create, as i believe it could be used in two (and one "not shipped") uses. 1. creating a color scheme for a book (publishing) 2. creating a color scheme for an artwork, logo, or other stand alone image (graphics) 3. creating a color scheme for a website ("not shipped") scottl
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