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#21
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
"Steve Andrew" wrote in message
... Steve Andrew wrote: Orville Wright wrote: (n) wrote in message . com... I have a colour photo which i converted to black and white. I would prefer it to be "moss and white" ie, green, or sepia or some other colour. How do i do this in photoshop? It spelled "color", not "colour". British English is dead. Hope this helps, Orville So America is right, and 53 other countries are wrong ? While we are on the subject, perhaps somebody should point out that 'Metre' is a unit of meausre, whereas 'Meter' is a measuring instrument. As far as I know, America is a memebr of the International Standards Organistaion. Do try and keep up... Before somebody flames me - I have just spotted the typoe... It should be 'Organisation' ;- You mean besides, "memebr?" G That is correct? -- Skip Middleton http://www.shadowcatcherimagery.com |
#22
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
Alan Browne wrote:
Steve Andrew wrote: Bugger - Typed in haste - I _knew_ I should have spill chucked it :-) Since the organization you refer to doesn't exist; and the one you meant has nothing to do with defining/maintaining the metric system, it is all fairly moot. You are correct - As an electronics engineer for the past 30 years, I should have known this. The Metre is an SI unit and is defined by Le Bureau International des Poids et Mesures in France. I could never work out why the International Organization for Standardization (Their spelling, not mine) should use the initials ISO instead of IOS. In any case, usenet is for sharing and communication so critique or even noting of people's spelling errors, typos and grammatical errors is usually not good form, esp. as many posters are not posting in their mother tongue.. Grammar so poor as to confuse or obfuscate the message can be open season. Again you are correct and I would normally refrain from correcting somebody who may use English as a second language. Having said that, I do take exception to Orville Wright stating that 'colour' is incorrect and that 'British English' is dead. (The other day I wrote a curt letter to the Washington post. They were commenting on Bill Clinton's new 957 page "tomb". I would have loved to have your "spill chucker" line... and yes, they did correct it (in the online edition) and sent me a terse "It's corrected" e-mail). Cheers, Alan |
#23
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
Alan Browne wrote:
Steve Andrew wrote: Orville Wright wrote: (n) wrote in message . com... I have a colour photo which i converted to black and white. I would prefer it to be "moss and white" ie, green, or sepia or some other colour. How do i do this in photoshop? It spelled "color", not "colour". British English is dead. Hope this helps, Orville So America is right, and 53 other countries are wrong ? While we are on the subject, perhaps somebody should point out that 'Metre' is a unit of meausre, whereas 'Meter' is a measuring instrument. As far as I know, America is a memebr of the International Standards Organistaion. There is no such thing as "International Standards Organistaion sic", you meant the International Organization for Standards. "ISO" is not an acronym, it is a symbol. Actually, I meant the 'International Organization for Standardization' - Their spelling, not mine. :-) Further, ISO does NOT maintain the metric system. The metric system (Systeme Internationale d'Unités) is "maintained" by Le Bureau International des Poids et Mesures in Paris, not the OIS. The US, and 50 other countries in the world are member states of the BIPM and support it n various ways including participation by various US agencies in the CGPM's (meetings every few years) various committees. The US was one of the earliest signatories to the SI (1875). (Surprise!). However, the US reserved the right to allow merchants to continue the use of Imperial (and Imperial like) measures for commerce. The US Armed Forces have been greatly metricized for decades for scientific as well as NATO interopperability reasons (the Army and Marines most so, the Air Force and Navy less so). The use of metric is, by US law, the preferred system: http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/15/205b.html Cheers, Alan. |
#24
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
"TP" wrote in message
... "Steve Andrew" wrote: So America is right, and 53 other countries are wrong ? While we are on the subject, perhaps somebody should point out that 'Metre' is a unit of meausre, whereas 'Meter' is a measuring instrument. As far as I know, America is a memebr of the International Standards Organistaion. Do try and keep up... Before somebody flames me - I have just spotted the typoe... It should be 'Organisation' ;- Plus "memebr" should be "member". And "typoe" should be "typo". :-) No doubt some Merkin will tell you that "Organisation" should have the s replaced by a z. ;-) As a "Merkin" (My fellow Merkins...old joke on LBJ) who insists on spelling the neutral color between white and black as "grey" rather than "gray" as my spell check insists, either way will be just fine... ;-) -- Skip Middleton http://www.shadowcatcherimagery.com |
#25
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
Skip M wrote:
"Steve Andrew" wrote in message ... Steve Andrew wrote: Orville Wright wrote: (n) wrote in message . com... I have a colour photo which i converted to black and white. I would prefer it to be "moss and white" ie, green, or sepia or some other colour. How do i do this in photoshop? It spelled "color", not "colour". British English is dead. Hope this helps, Orville So America is right, and 53 other countries are wrong ? While we are on the subject, perhaps somebody should point out that 'Metre' is a unit of meausre, whereas 'Meter' is a measuring instrument. As far as I know, America is a memebr of the International Standards Organistaion. Do try and keep up... Before somebody flames me - I have just spotted the typoe... It should be 'Organisation' ;- You mean besides, "memebr?" G That is correct? Yes.. |
#26
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
haha no way
this is my "relaxation" typing technique. waaay too difficult to use that pinky for the shift/caps keys. and yes, i have NO idea what you mean, but i will google it oh, look! capitals just for you :P "Jim" wrote in message ... "Alex A." wrote: egads! well i stand corrected No problem, and do take a seat. But also, try to work out where the Caps key is. e.e.cummings is out of fashion. (Yes, I know, you have no idea what I mean... [To email go to my address and take out the dog...] |
#27
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
Alan Browne wrote: I could never work out why the International Organization for Standardization (Their spelling, not mine) should use the initials ISO instead of IOS. Presumably it's easier to pronounce ISO than IOS - although Canon seem to have no problem using a similarly spelt word for one of their products! |
#28
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
On Thu, 24 Jun 2004, Steve Andrew wrote:
I could never work out why the International Organization for Standardization (Their spelling, not mine) should use the initials ISO instead of IOS. It may be a language issue. eg. NATO is OTAN in some european countries. -- Jose Marques |
#29
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
On Thu, 24 Jun 2004 22:42:30 GMT, Steve Andrew
wrote: I could never work out why the International Organization for Standardization (Their spelling, not mine) should use the initials ISO instead of IOS. From their own site http://www.iso.org/ : "Because "International Organization for Standardization" would have different abbreviations in different languages ("IOS" in English, "OIN" in French for Organisation internationale de normalisation), it was decided at the outset to use a word derived from the Greek isos, meaning "equal". Therefore, whatever the country, whatever the language, the short form of the organization's name is always ISO." -espen -- http://www.seland.org/photo/ |
#30
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How to Change colour of black and white photos
Steve Andrew wrote:
Alan Browne wrote: Steve Andrew wrote: Bugger - Typed in haste - I _knew_ I should have spill chucked it :-) Since the organization you refer to doesn't exist; and the one you meant has nothing to do with defining/maintaining the metric system, it is all fairly moot. You are correct - As an electronics engineer for the past 30 years, I should have known this. The Metre is an SI unit and is defined by Le Bureau International des Poids et Mesures in France. I could never work out why the International Organization for Standardization (Their spelling, not mine) should use the initials ISO instead of IOS. Iso, in Greek, means 'equal'. Standardization. I do take exception to the troll stating that 'colour' is incorrect and that 'British English' is dead. I'm in Canada where 'colour' is the generally accepted spelling (as is 'grey' v. 'gray', etc.); however the influence of the US is very strong here in this communications age. It is ironically worse here in Quebec as French Canadians are very strongly influenced by the US... Cheers, Alan -- --e-meil: there's no such thing as a FreeLunch.-- |
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