If you don't mind a gradient with 400 colours you could try a palette editor utility called ApoMap which converts images to Apophysis style gradients. You can download this free Open Source utility here: apophysis.org
To obtain a gradient you can use in UF:
- Open an image in ApoMap using the "Smooth Palette" command
- Tweak the result as you see fit or leave as is
- Use the Copy command to copy the gradient to the clipboard
- Open a gradient editor window in UF --> Paste in your new gradient then save in your Gradients folder
These instructions are for Windows users. I don't know if any of this applies to Mac users.
Apo gradients are a bit messy as every one of the 400 nodes is a colour but they can be useful on occasion so I'm just mentioning it as an alternative method you might like to look at.
If you don't mind a gradient with 400 colours you could try a palette editor utility called _ApoMap_ which converts images to Apophysis style gradients. You can download this free Open Source utility here: [apophysis.org](http://www.apophysis.org/downloads.html)
To obtain a gradient you can use in UF:
- Open an image in ApoMap using the "Smooth Palette" command
- Tweak the result as you see fit or leave as is
- Use the Copy command to copy the gradient to the clipboard
- Open a gradient editor window in UF --> Paste in your new gradient then save in your Gradients folder
These instructions are for Windows users. I don't know if any of this applies to Mac users.
Apo gradients are a bit messy as every one of the 400 nodes is a colour but they can be useful on occasion so I'm just mentioning it as an alternative method you might like to look at.
Chris Martin
Gallery: Velvet--Glove.deviantart.com
Currently using UF6.05 on Windows 11 Professional 64-bit
edited Aug 6 '16 at 4:45 pm