Re: [Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-14 Thread Liam R E Quin
On Thu, 2009-04-09 at 12:04 -0400, Rob Antonishen wrote:
 Just wanted to share some (positive) feedback from a person I had been
 pushing to try gimp:

[...]


 My conclusion is that either the scare stories are wrong, or the
 latest version of the software is much easier to use than earlier
 versions.

This is really positive, and it's fabulous and kind of you to
have shared it.  I'm not sure why people started to jump in and
criticise.  Let's just be pleased about good feedback!

Thanks for sending that!

Liam

-- 
Liam Quin - XML Activity Lead, W3C, http://www.w3.org/People/Quin/
Pictures from old books: http://fromoldbooks.org/
Ankh: irc.sorcery.net irc.gnome.org www.advogato.org

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Re: [Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-12 Thread Rob Antonishen
I think it is time to bow out, since I am not an artist ;)

I'm an engineer both by training and by upbringing, so to be honest, I
have trouble appreciating artistic effort that could be better
accomplished through automation ;)

(Don't even ask my opinion on pointillism...)

-Rob A
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Re: [Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-11 Thread Alexandre Prokoudine
On Fri, Apr 10, 2009 at 5:10 AM, Mirai Warren wrote:
 The notion that a program can improve artistic skills is heavily and
 typically misleading.  An artist can put together excellent works with
 any tool he chooses to use.  For instance, Microsoft Paint is
 responsible for some of the best creations at pixeljoint.com.

So first you say that artist puts works together, but in the end it's
still Microsoft Paint that does the job? Looks like you have to make a
tough choice to stop contradicting yourself :)

Look, it's really simple. Application is a toolbox that you use to get
things done. Each tool is unique and usually implies a particular use
(while combinations are infinite). You can't substitute a saw with a
hammer or a screwdriver. Each new tool, when designed with love, care
and reason, either broadens artist's horizons or helps to get things
done faster, or both. Of course it will help one to improve skills,
because being able to do things faster and have time to experiment
just like being able to do completely new things does bring you on a
new level. If you are open to learn.

Alexandre
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Re: [Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-11 Thread Rob Antonishen
On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 9:10 PM, Mirai Warren wrote:
 The notion that a program can improve artistic skills is heavily and
 typically misleading.  An artist can put together excellent works with
 any tool he chooses to use.  For instance, Microsoft Paint is
 responsible for some of the best creations at pixeljoint.com.

 On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 11:04 AM, Rob Antonishen wrote:
 If it's the latter, then a new download of Gimp might just give you a
 drawing program that will improve your skills - as it has with mine.

To be honest, that wasn't the point I was hoping to convey ;)

I was hoping this:
However, I recently got Gimp and I was pleasantly surprised at my
ability to pick it up, even without an integral help file (which still
won't load )
I'd heard all sorts of horror stories about how difficult it is to
use, but that isn't my experience. I found it quite possible to use
the basics and ignore the rest.

My conclusion is that either the scare stories are wrong, or the
latest version of the software is much easier to use than earlier
versions.

would be the perceived point.

And while I can accept what you say (to a degree), I highly doubt any
individual would create something like this:
http://www.pixeljoint.com/pixelart/5646.htm

using paint.  While it is technically possibly to create dither
patterns like this using a tool like MS-Paint (which it wasn't in this
case - it was Gimp), it is my opinion that an artist would have to
either be masochistic, have way to much time on their hands, or just
be stubbornly trying to make a point to use such a tool rather than a
more suitable one...

-Rob A
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Re: [Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-11 Thread Mirai Warren
Ach.  Sorry, but my meaning was simply that an artist can create art
with any tool.  mspaint was only an example.

Looks like you have to make a tough choice to stop contradicting yourself :)
I wasn't contradicting myself.  By was responsible for I meant was
used to create.  It is still the artist that creates.

While it is technically possibly to create dither
patterns like this using a tool like MS-Paint (which it wasn't in this
case - it was Gimp), it is my opinion that an artist would have to
either be masochistic, have way to much time on their hands, or just
be stubbornly trying to make a point to use such a tool rather than a
more suitable one...
I can do those patterns with mspaint rather easily, and I am not a masochist.

--MW
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Re: [Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-11 Thread David Gowers
On Sun, Apr 12, 2009 at 5:11 AM, Mirai Warren
the.future.comes...@gmail.com wrote:
 Ach.  Sorry, but my meaning was simply that an artist can create art
 with any tool.  mspaint was only an example.

Looks like you have to make a tough choice to stop contradicting yourself :)
 I wasn't contradicting myself.  By was responsible for I meant was
 used to create.  It is still the artist that creates.

While it is technically possibly to create dither
patterns like this using a tool like MS-Paint (which it wasn't in this
case - it was Gimp), it is my opinion that an artist would have to
either be masochistic, have way to much time on their hands, or just
be stubbornly trying to make a point to use such a tool rather than a
more suitable one...
 I can do those patterns with mspaint rather easily, and I am not a masochist.

I can do them easily (in GIMP, and probably in mspaint). But it takes
more time, and is meaningless grunt work -- I already know exactly
what is wanted there, so the method I used was to generate a sample of
the dithering and then clone it. With the advent of the 'clipboard
pattern' feature in GIMP, this would be even easier -- I could draw
the ditherpattern sample directly onto the image before copying that
section and cloning from Clipboard Pattern. Tool use allows you to
forget about the meaningless and spend more time on the meaningful.

The time that you can choose to spend rendering such things manually,
subtracts from the time you have to attend to other parts, and to the
picture as a whole. As long as there is an efficiency gain, tools are
worthwhile to use. I do not use a cloning method for small amounts of
dithering, as it is more efficient to just render them with pencil
tool.

Yes, I'm the artist of that picture :)

If you're not very practiced at dithering, it might be good to spend
time doing it manually despite available tools to automate it. With
the understanding of what you want that comes with experience, this is
only rarely needed.

David
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Re: [Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-10 Thread Henk Boom
2009/4/9 Mirai Warren the.future.comes...@gmail.com:
 The notion that a program can improve artistic skills is heavily and
 typically misleading.  An artist can put together excellent works with
 any tool he chooses to use.  For instance, Microsoft Paint is
 responsible for some of the best creations at pixeljoint.com.

Exploring any new means of creation, digital or physical, can
obviously improve technical skills relating to  arts. Artistic
skills in general are harder to comment on, but from my experience
exploration is always beneficial.

Back on topic, I had always heard how bad GIMP's interface is, despite
the fact that I was using it perfectly fine. Although GIMP's UI is far
from perfect, I think at a certain point that opinion has become
something many people trust in without even trying the software for
themselves, and what they've heard about it makes it easy to mistake
its differences with other tools for poor quality.

Henk
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Re: [Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-10 Thread Mirai Warren
This seems to run as a general response to software that challenges
another with a major market share/user base, and particularly free
software like blender and the gimp.  I myself was sceptical of both of
those projects earlier on due to prior experience with Maya and
Photoshop.  Many who use these professionally or regularly (I did not)
are much more apt to complain to others; for example, a teacher to his
students, a friend to friends.

On 4/10/09, Henk Boom lunarcri...@gmail.com wrote:
  Back on topic, I had always heard how bad GIMP's interface is, despite
  the fact that I was using it perfectly fine. Although GIMP's UI is far
  from perfect, I think at a certain point that opinion has become
  something many people trust in without even trying the software for
  themselves, and what they've heard about it makes it easy to mistake
  its differences with other tools for poor quality.


 Henk

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[Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-09 Thread Rob Antonishen
Just wanted to share some (positive) feedback from a person I had been
pushing to try gimp:

---
I've used MS Paint for a long time for pretty similar reasons - my
artistic talents approach zero, it's all I had on my computer, and
it's free.

I, too, figured there was no point getting new software that would
have loads of stuff I couldn't use obscuring stuff I could use if only
I could find it under all the clutter. I wanted MS Paint plus a little
bit, and I, too, had a list of 'fixes', top of the list being negative
zoom.

However, I recently got Gimp and I was pleasantly surprised at my
ability to pick it up, even without an integral help file (which still
won't load )
I'd heard all sorts of horror stories about how difficult it is to
use, but that isn't my experience. I found it quite possible to use
the basics and ignore the rest.

My conclusion is that either the scare stories are wrong, or the
latest version of the software is much easier to use than earlier
versions.

If it's the latter, then a new download of Gimp might just give you a
drawing program that will improve your skills - as it has with mine.
---

Just something to think about, the ...scare stories... comment.

-Rob A
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Re: [Gimp-developer] New User's opinion

2009-04-09 Thread Mirai Warren
The notion that a program can improve artistic skills is heavily and
typically misleading.  An artist can put together excellent works with
any tool he chooses to use.  For instance, Microsoft Paint is
responsible for some of the best creations at pixeljoint.com.

On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 11:04 AM, Rob Antonishen
rob.antonis...@gmail.com wrote:
 If it's the latter, then a new download of Gimp might just give you a
 drawing program that will improve your skills - as it has with mine.
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