March 3, 201016 yr I'm creating my own photoscenery areas and I'm having a problem with a lower ordered scenery area showing through a higher ordered area per FS9 Scenery Library, e.g., in the reference image provided below, Area B appears in the library list before Area A.In this example, the eastern boundary of Area A is the second vertical blue line and the western boundary of Area B is the vertical green line. The overlap area is shown shaded in magenta. Disregard the unmasked water area. The areas marked 'Bleed' is where Area A is showing through Area B in the overlap area that should be controlled by Area B. With a little color correction on Area A this might not be a problem...BUT, as many who have used this certain scenery creation tool know (I'll leave it un-named here), often the compiled scenery area contains a water-textured band along the eastern side of the scenery area. This area is shown as the two vertical blue lines. The two, dark blue squares I've outlined in lighter blue show through the Area B scenery which really annoys me!Does anybody have any idea why I'm getting this 'bleed through' problem? And more importantly, is there anything I can do to address this issue (besides ignore it and move on)?Perhaps of note is that Area B is Blue Sky Scenery's 'LAX North' area in case that might factor in. I haven't had any issues with overlapping in areas where I have created both adjacent areas (as long as I set the priorities correctly in the Scenery Library).Hope someone can help!*** Update ***Please also see second embedded image, might this be the problem?First image didn't include the whole picture...sorry! In the below image, Area A's northern boundary is depicted by the yellow horizontal line, and Area B by the red horizontal line. The green shaded area between the yellow and red lines is controlled by Area A. Could this somehow be causing an override of the other areas (bleed) in Area B? Though not shown, Area A and Area B in the below image are as previously defined above.
March 4, 201016 yr Are the two source images of different resolution? This might provide a clue.Best regards.Luis Hot, humid Caribbean paradise!
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