The Meaning of Life, the Universe, and Everything.
Join Date:
1/23/2019
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To give an item frame a tint over the item you have to hold a glass panel of the color you want the tint to be, crouch, and look at the item frame and right click. When you break the item frame you get a tinted item frame. If it was tinted green it would be a Green tinted item frame. When you put an item in it there is a tint of the color you chose on the the item and the rest of the item frame.
Might be interesting aesthetically, but does not seem to be something that would be widely used.
(The described effect seems like it could be approximated by placing a pane of colored glass in front of an item frame – at the cost of making it less easily accessible.)
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"Why does everything have to be so stoopid?" Harvey Pekar (from American Splendor)
WARNING: I have an extemely "grindy" playstyle; YMMV — if this doesn't seem fun to you, mine what you can from it & bin the rest.
To give an item frame a tint over the item you have to hold a glass panel of the color you want the tint to be, crouch, and look at the item frame and right click. When you break the item frame you get a tinted item frame. If it was tinted green it would be a Green tinted item frame. When you put an item in it there is a tint of the color you chose on the the item and the rest of the item frame.
cool! it is useful for design
Might be interesting aesthetically, but does not seem to be something that would be widely used.
(The described effect seems like it could be approximated by placing a pane of colored glass in front of an item frame – at the cost of making it less easily accessible.)