Hi,
On Wed, 2008-04-09 at 17:05 +0100, Jonathan Allen wrote:
> Can anyone help me to do this? I look after a small on-line magazine
> and they have a mast-head logo at the top of several pages. This is
> in colour, but only different saturations of the same colour. Each
> month, the print-desi
I might have gotten the add/subtract part mixed up in number 8, if so, it'll
be obvious, just cancel and reverse the operation.
On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 11:08 AM, Nathan Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 11:02 AM, Nathan Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> > OK, here are th
On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 11:02 AM, Nathan Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> OK, here are the steps I followed to do what I think you are trying to do.
> >
> > 1. Load you image
> > 2. Using the dropper tool, click on the color on the image the was the
> > old text color
> > 3. Click on the Color in
On Wed, 2008-04-09 at 17:51 +0100, Jonathan Allen wrote:
> If I go into Layer-Colours-Hue/Saturation, then click 'Master', moving the
> 'Hue' slider bar alters the hue of the whole graphic (which is one single
> colour on a white background). I want to do this effect, with a colour
> chooser inter
On Wed, 2008-04-09 at 17:05 +0100, Jonathan Allen wrote:
> I can always see the HTML colour selected (color=#XX) for the text
> and need to track the masthead colour to match. How do I get the Gimp
> to exactly track that hex colour - is there somewhere I can input it
> as a value and just it
Nathan,
> When you click on the color on the Gimp tool dialog a color chooser dialog
> pops up and you can enter a hex value in the text field there. Is that what
> you mean?
Yes and no - it's exactly that sort of user-interface I am looking for,
but to be able to set the hue of an existing graph
Hi All,
Can anyone help me to do this? I look after a small on-line magazine
and they have a mast-head logo at the top of several pages. This is
in colour, but only different saturations of the same colour. Each
month, the print-designer changes the colour of the text headlines
and the mast-hea