Hi,
On Tue, 2007-09-18 at 07:55 +0200, B.W.H. van Beest wrote:
When I rotate an image using GIMP a few degrees, to correct that I
didn't hold my camera horizontal, the next step is to crop the rotated
image such that it appears upright again.
I realise that it must be possible to do the
On Tuesday 18 September 2007, B.W.H. van Beest wrote:
Dear GIMP people,
When I rotate an image using GIMP a few degrees, to correct that I
didn't hold my camera horizontal, the next step is to crop the rotated
image such that it appears upright again.
I realise that it must be possible to do
Thanks for the help and possible solutions.
I do not intend to buy _any_ proprietary software. Sorry, that dinosaur is
dead.
Unfortunately, the info is not quite what i need: i blame this on my own
missing information.
The scanner is attached to a WinNT4 box (the last Win i have bought a
snip
Right folks. I have carried out, to the best of my failing ability, the
instructions you gave, to the letter except that, because I am using
Gimp-2.3.18, I substituted this for Gimp-2.4.0. I was informed that the
symlink had been done.
Result:- load Gimp 2.2.13, drag image into the window
hi
I just wrote a doc on saving images for the web using gimp. I was
wondering if anyone could read it and send me feedback?
http://en.flossmanuals.net/bin/view/Gimp/OptimisingImagesForWeb
adam
--
adam hyde
floss manuals
free manuals for free software
http://www.flossmanuals.net
mobile :
hi
I just wrote a doc on saving images for the web using gimp. I was
wondering if anyone could read it and send me feedback?
http://en.flossmanuals.net/bin/view/Gimp/OptimisingImagesForWeb
In 2.4 the properties are found at Image-Image-Image properties which is
a change from the 2.2.x
Hello Adam,
I just wrote a doc on saving images for the web using gimp. I was
wondering if anyone could read it and send me feedback?
http://en.flossmanuals.net/bin/view/Gimp/OptimisingImagesForWeb
At start I was thinking wow, that is very detailed! but when you get
to jpeg you loose your
ooo..good feedback...thanks!!!
On Tue, 2007-09-18 at 14:04 +0200, Jan Tomasek wrote:
Hello Adam,
I just wrote a doc on saving images for the web using gimp. I was
wondering if anyone could read it and send me feedback?
http://en.flossmanuals.net/bin/view/Gimp/OptimisingImagesForWeb
On Tuesday 18 September 2007, adam hyde wrote:
hi
I just wrote a doc on saving images for the web using gimp. I was
wondering if anyone could read it and send me feedback?
http://en.flossmanuals.net/bin/view/Gimp/OptimisingImagesForWeb
adam
And one more thing about saving to jpg.
adam hyde wrote:
hi
I just wrote a doc on saving images for the web using gimp. I was
wondering if anyone could read it and send me feedback?
http://en.flossmanuals.net/bin/view/Gimp/OptimisingImagesForWeb
adam
I can read it!!
André den Oudsten
I am not qualified to comment on the actual topic in question...however, you do
have a
sentence near the bottom that seems, at the very least, somewhat awkward. I
can't quite
figure out what it is trying to say. It almost seems as if it were somehow
constructed
from two separate sentences
by -- but :)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Elwin Estle
Sent: mardi 18 septembre 2007 16:18
To: gimp-user@lists.xcf.berkeley.edu
Subject: Re: [Gimp-user] can someone check this doc for me?
I am not qualified to comment on
Yes, 2.4 has color management.
Richard Oliver wrote:
Does Gimp have any thing like the colour management system that Photoshop
has , which I believe can be used to set the system to a standard setting
to ensure that periferals such as monitors,cameras., printers etc are all
operating on
Does Gimp have any thing like the colour management system that Photoshop
has , which I believe can be used to set the system to a standard setting
to ensure that periferals such as monitors,cameras., printers etc are all
operating on the same colour values.
Regards,Richard
Can I profile my monitor with this? If so, what are the supported profiling
tools? I went to PS simply because I couldn't make head nor tail of the lcms
stuff, but absolutely have to have a true monitor.
Cheers,
Simon
- Original Message
From: Alexander Rabtchevich [EMAIL PROTECTED]
As I understand, lcms provides use of color profiles, not their
construction. Take a look at the LProf
http://lprof.sourceforge.net/
Simon Roberts wrote:
Can I profile my monitor with this? If so, what are the supported profiling
tools? I went to PS simply because I couldn't make head nor
Lucas Prado Melo wrote:
How can I identify (using gimp) if a photograph has been faked?
It would depend on how good a job was done in faking the image. The basics
involve using a high zoom factor to see the pixels. Look for artifacts created
by a poor blend of the added in (faked) part of the
On 9/18/07, Kevin Cozens [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Lucas Prado Melo wrote:
How can I identify (using gimp) if a photograph has been faked?
It would depend on how good a job was done in faking the image. The basics
involve using a high zoom factor to see the pixels. Look for artifacts created
Anthony Ettinger ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Lucas Prado Melo wrote:
How can I identify (using gimp) if a photograph has been faked?
[...]
I would be interested in learning more about high-level techniques for
analysis as well.
If anyone finds a resource.
At the last chaos communication
On Sunday 16 September 2007 15:56, Lucas Prado Melo wrote:
How can I identify (using gimp) if a photograph has been faked?
[]'s
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