![]() “Stick to applying to the high points of the face, which will add a little warmth to the skin,” without the need of a real tan. What’s summer without a little bronzer? Ruby recommends opting for creams over powders here though. I dislike powder in general for touch-ups throughout the day, so I’d suggest the Shiseido Oil-Control Blotting Paper,” Andrew adds. "I love blotting papers as they reduce the temptation to add excess powder to the complexion, which never looks good. “I love to keep a blotting paper, or a single ply of tissue handy for a quick oil fix before having a photo taken," says Ruby. Befriend blotting powdersīoth Andrew and Ruby swear by blotting powders for hotter temperatures. If you want something with more coverage, the MAC Studio Face and Body Foundation is great as “it contains film formers that dry down to a water-resistant finish that enable the foundation to stay in place for longer.” 5. “I use this as an alternative to foundation by mixing it with the 111SKIN Repair Day Cream to sheer out the formula,” he says, creating a second skin finish. ![]() And the Anastasia Beverly Hills Magic Touch Concealer for darker skin tones, which he says is really versatile and buildable. Thanx Daveed! If it's too much to go at with one pass, I recommend breaking it up into your pieces, or work on exporting your fave textures first and working from there, etc.During hot and humid weather, Andrew tends to avoid oil and silicone-based complexion products, instead opting for water-based formulas “as they dry down and set without the use of setting powder or spray.” He likes Chanel’s Vitalumiere Aqua for light to medium skin tones as its beautifully luminous without looking shiny. Always nice to read your articles, as I usually find out something new and useful. ![]() Been wondering myself *checks inventory.winces at the amount of time to d/l all the textures in there.chuckles*. Now I can share, thanks.Įxcellent piece Torley. Oh Wow! ESP or what! I have recently asked some friends how to do this. ▓▒░ TORLEY ░▒▓ edited this topic ages ago. Originally posted at 11:07AM, 20 February 2007 PDT Unfortunately, there's no way to do this at present - textures must be saved one at a time, and named accordingly. How do I batch save textures to my hard drive?Ī common example of this is when someone's accumulated many months (or even years) of Second Life memories, and wants to save all their photos to their hard drive. We know this - different icons for essentially what's the same item type - is confusing to some, and perhaps in the future, this can be improved. One other difference is, if someone else sends you a snapshot with the latter icon, it'll end up in the Textures folder. If you use File menu > Upload Image, the resulting texture has this icon and ends up in the Textures folder:Īnd if you take an inworld snapshot (Snapshot button > "Upload a snapshot, then click Upload), the resulting texture has this icon and ends up in the Photo Album folder: Good question! For all practical purposes, they function the same, but the icon denotes how the texture got into Second Life. You can upload them to a photo-sharing website like Flickr, which has both a Resident-run and a Linden-run Linden Village group. In any case, once the texture's on your local disk, you're free to edit it, and then re-upload it back into Second Life if you want. Most graphics editors are capable of viewing TGA, and there are some free ones, like XnView, which can convert into other formats too. ![]() TGA stands for the Targa file format, which can also be used to upload textures into Second Life. If you go to that directory on your computer, you should see a "texture.tga" file. * Give it a name (it doesn't auto-copy the name of the texture), and save it to a directory. * Double-click the texture in inventory to view it. You can check this by right-clicking a texture in your inventory and selecting Properties.īy default, textures you upload yourself, whether it's via File menu > Upload Image or the Snapshot button > "Upload a snapshot", will be fully-permissive for you. You can export any fully-permissive texture from Second Life and save it to your hard drive (or other storage medium).īy fully-permissive, this means you must have ALL "Modify", "Copy", and "Resell/Give away" (transfer) rights for the texture. The following info is also in the official Second Life Knowledge Base.
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