If it's the term I'm thinking of there are maybe twenty different ways to do 
this in GIMP.  But all of them have one thing in common - you need to import 
both source images as separate layers in the same image window.

>From that point you can:
1 - Set the top layer's mode to either Brightest or Addition (neither one 
precisely reproduces an actual double exposure, but they're close)
2 - Keep the top layer's mode Normal and use the Eraser (or a layer mask) to 
fade the edges/transition between them.

-- Stratadrake
strata_ran...@hotmail.com
--------------------
Numbers may not lie, but neither do they tell the whole truth.


Date: Sun, 4 Nov 2012 09:56:58 -0500
From: ellimae...@gmail.com
To: gimp-user-list@gnome.org
Subject: [Gimp-user] double exposure

Is there a way to use this program to create a double exposure effect?  I can 
do it with my 35mm camera manually while taking pics.  But was not sure if you 
can create the same digitally??
Thank you!

Jenn

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