Hello Martin,
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 8:18 AM, Martin Nordholts [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi David
David Gowers wrote:
Ah, so if I want to make the result preserve the alpha of the
underlying layer, I'll need to do that via layer mask?
Exactly, masking should generally be performed *after*
Hi,
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 9:18 AM, David Gowers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'll see what happens when I make that change :)
(apparently just one line, app/core/gimpprojection.c:391, is needed to
be changed to implement this now :D)
This was slightly more complex than I said.
Somewhat hackish
Hello,
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 12:50 PM, David Gowers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Lastly! I don't know whether this merges shadow-tiles in linear-light
RGB or not. It appears that it does, but I haven't run proper tests
yet :)
No, it doesn't.
David
David Gowers wrote:
So eventually we need to be able to construct on-demand babl_formats
which utilize arbitrary profiles, and have babl depend on lcms to get
a acceptably quick transform between those and the standard spaces?
And recognize the use of standard colorspace profiles (eg sRGB,
Hi
The layer modes have now been ported to GEGL.
As layer mode compositing with GEGL uses a different model than legacy
layer mode compositing it deserves some elaboration. If you want to try
out the new layer mode compositing you can do View - Use GEGL in GIMP
trunk.
The new model is based on
Hello Martin,
On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 4:36 AM, Martin Nordholts [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
2. With a 100% opaque Addition mode layer put on top a completely
transparent layer, the resulting composite becomes 100% opaque
containing the unblended Addition mode layer pixels when using GEGL, but