Well...yes and no! So, we're vetting a new vendor partner in a totally different kind of flooring material - magnetic LVT. We are literally their first distributor partner here in the U.S. (they are European based manufacturer).CFR who ever that floor belongs to I'd say they have a moisture problem, am I right?
So cool 😎 thanks for bringing us into this new and exciting time of flooring.The nice part is this stuff is super easy to remove. You literally just lift it up and it will release from the subfloor. No sticky mess.
Have you tried blocking out colors.... R G B instead of b/w or inverting to a negative?
Yeah, and that can work better in some situations, but I found this the easiest and most consistent way for my eye. Everyone sees color differently, but black and white tends to be more consistent in how people see it. If you look in these images, it not only shows the ledging problem, but you can actually see the light and dark shading issues along the long edges of the tiles. This is an inherent issue with this particular decor film. I've run into it before with other manufacturers. It has to do with the darker "chip" element and how frequently it appears along the edge in some tiles vs. others. The manufacturer stated that they couldn't see it, until I showed them in black and white as an example.Have you tried blocking out colors.... R G B instead of b/w or inverting to a negative?
The desire to improve sometimes exceedsThis has nothing to do with photography but that magnetic floor brought back memories of why I said F this and left the industry.
I mentioned that because to view some barely discernable letters and numbers on a metal part, I think I used photoshops histogram sliders to remove colors to monochrome, then slid the RGB sliders one at a time and things showed up better with one color at a time.Yeah, and that can work better in some situations, but I found this the easiest and most consistent way for my eye. Everyone sees color differently, but black and white tends to be more consistent in how people see it. If you look in these images, it not only shows the ledging problem, but you can actually see the light and dark shading issues along the long edges of the tiles. This is an inherent issue with this particular decor film. I've run into it before with other manufacturers. It has to do with the darker "chip" element and how frequently it appears along the edge in some tiles vs. others. The manufacturer stated that they couldn't see it, until I showed them in black and white as an example.
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