On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 12:14 AM,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have some comments on Bhaaluu's onion-skinning tutorial which is
included at the end of this message.
WOW! Your comments and suggestions are invaluable! This post is a keeper.
One other little thing that I did that I found very
Greetings!
Thank you so very much for all the wonderful, fantastic help you provided!
My Summary of how I implemented your information is included in this
post, below your very helpful post. Perhaps it will serve to help someone
else who needs to do something similar? I hope so.
On Sat, Oct 18,
I have some comments on Bhaaluu's onion-skinning tutorial which is
included at the end of this message.
Step 9 instructs the user to perform a File-Open the second frame
(f_02.xcf). When using GAP, you should not use File-Open to
navigate frames; use one of the commands: Video-Go To
Greetings,
I am running a Debian GNU/Linux 'Etch' distribution with The Gimp 2.2.
I have Akkana Peck's book: Beginning GIMP From Novice To Professional.
My background is in Art. I have a small Art Bronze foundry, a small
woodworking studio, a sculpture studio, and an animation studio.
I also
bhaaluu ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote (in part) (on 2008-10-18 at 11:20):
I am running a Debian GNU/Linux 'Etch' distribution with The Gimp
2.2.
Can you upgrade to Gimp 2.6.1? - Following probably works with Gimp 2.2
but I don't have it anymore.
Next, I need to know how to actually
I would recommend first reading the reference documentation that is included
with the source code.
Online at:
http://svn.gnome.org/viewvc/gimp-gap/trunk/docs/reference/txt/plug-in-gap-onionskin-configuration.txt?revision=470view=markup
Next, your scanned files should be named sequentially in the
Hey there.
I've been playing around with GAP and trying to apply a more traditional
approach with it, and ran into a problem.
I can't seem to choose two separate onionskins from two (vastly separated
frames.) This is a bit difficult for in-betweening.
Here's the first three using a bouncing