Quoting Alec Burgess :
> For improved discoverablity suggest that the '+' sign s/b added to
> drag-drop anywhere its legal to drop and in particular only be removed
> in the Channels dialog when cursor is over the components section but
> reappear when cursor is *anywhere* below the line. ...
Wha
Thanks Saul. (Leaving text below in case this s/b the basis for a
bugreport ...)
a) I can drag and drop in the Layers dialog - but never see the '+'-sign
in the cursor.
b) In your video (I stepped through it frame by frame so I'm pretty sure
I have this correct) as soon as you grabbed the layer
Quoting Alec Burgess :
> Saul:
> You said
>> 1. Drag your original layer over to the Channels Dialog and drop
>> it, creating a new channel.
> In your video, when you drag the image from the layer dock up to the
> channels dock your cursor has a '+' sign inside the
> _
> |+ ... when I do it I
Saul:
You said
1. Drag your original layer over to the Channels Dialog and drop it,
creating a new channel.
In your video, when you drag the image from the layer dock up to the
channels dock your cursor has a '+' sign inside the
_
|+ ... when I do it I have no plus sign and when the channels d
On Wed, Apr 1, 2009 at 10:53 PM, Olivier Lecarme
> Placing the top layer in divide mode is also very useful. Also try
> Overlay or Soft light. All this is much simpler than the method
> suggested by the original site, which seems an overkill.
Agreed. If I was doing this, I would not use channels a
Quoting paperaussie :
>
> Can any experienced Gimp users tell me how the process described in Ron
> Bigelow's article can be reproduced in Gimp most efficiently?
>
> http://www.ronbigelow.com/articles/contrast/contrast.htm
The following link is to a short screen capture of how that might be
don
Francesco Scaglioni wrote:
> How about something like :
>
> duplicate layer
> desaturate
> invert
> slight blur
> adjust opacity
> merge
Placing the top layer in divide mode is also very useful. Also try
Overlay or Soft light. All this is much simpler than the method
suggested by the original
On Wed, Apr 1, 2009 at 6:32 PM, paperaussie wrote:
>
> Can any experienced Gimp users tell me how the process described in Ron
> Bigelow's article can be reproduced in Gimp most efficiently?
>
> http://www.ronbigelow.com/articles/contrast/contrast.htm
> http://www.ronbigelow.com/articles/contrast/
How about something like :
duplicate layer
desaturate
invert
slight blur
adjust opacity
merge
HTH
-
The information in this e-mail and any attachments is
confidential and is intended for the attention and
Can any experienced Gimp users tell me how the process described in Ron
Bigelow's article can be reproduced in Gimp most efficiently?
http://www.ronbigelow.com/articles/contrast/contrast.htm
http://www.ronbigelow.com/articles/contrast/contrast.htm
Looks like a quite handy process to optimise so
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