On 06/26/2011 01:26 AM, John Culleton wrote:
On Saturday, June 25, 2011 06:50:04 pm Daniel Hornung wrote:
> Hi John,
> do you rotate the layer or the image?
>
> Cheers,
> Daniel
The image, using the tool on the left hand tool palette. How
do I rotate both simultaneously?
--
The thing
On Sunday, June 26, 2011 01:26:53 John Culleton wrote:
> On Saturday, June 25, 2011 06:50:04 pm Daniel Hornung wrote:
> > Hi John,
> > do you rotate the layer or the image?
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Daniel
>
> The image, using the tool on the left hand tool palette. How
> do I rotate both simultaneousl
On Saturday, June 25, 2011 06:50:04 pm Daniel Hornung wrote:
> Hi John,
> do you rotate the layer or the image?
>
> Cheers,
> Daniel
The image, using the tool on the left hand tool palette. How
do I rotate both simultaneously?
--
John Culleton
"Death Wore Black" Police procedural:
http://www.
Hi John,
do you rotate the layer or the image?
Cheers,
Daniel
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On 06/25/2011 05:42 PM, John Culleton wrote:
> I there a way to rotate the whole shebang so this cropping
> doesn't happen?
I believe Image>Transform>Rotate 90 degrees Left/Right will give you the
behavior you want.
-Stefan Maerz
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When I open a rectangular photographic image (JPG) and
rotate it 90 degrees, the canvas remains the same and the
ends of the photo are cropped. I there a way to rotate the
whole shebang so this cropping doesn't happen?
Telling the canvas to resize to the picture doesn't seem to
work for me.
G
When I import JPG images from my digital camera Gimp assumes
that they are 72 x 72 DPI. Is there a way to set this
defasult to be 600 x 600 without manually adjusting it each
time using "scale image"?
I use Gimp to print the images.
Gimp 2.6.11 on Salix Linux.
--
John Culleton
"Death Wore