Hi Mark,
I think you are trying something impossible. 300 dpi = 300 dots per inch
(or better ppi = pixel per inch). If your book is 6x9 your image bust be
(6x300)x(9x300) = 1800x2700 pixel. Every thing else will not work! You
can't change the dpi without changing the number of pixel and the other
Hello,
there is at the moment no developer/maintainer for the DDS plugin, have a
look at this links:
https://www.gimp.org/news/2019/04/07/gimp-2-10-10-released/#dds-support
https://twitter.com/zemarmot/status/1080529391871016960
Regards,
Tobias
Am Do., 8. Aug. 2019 um 13:31 Uhr schrieb FR-153
Hi Andy,
please open an issue in the Gimp issue tracker and attach an example file:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/issues
Some scanners create 4-channel/12bit encodedimages. Then the 4th channel
is an IR channel that is useful for reducing dust.
Regards,
Tobias
Am Mi., 14. Aug. 2019 um
I think this is a good starting point how to work with infrared images and
open source tools:
https://discuss.pixls.us/search?q=Infrared
Regards,
Tobias
Am Mo., 27. Mai 2019 um 18:43 Uhr schrieb robert hungate via gimp-user-list
:
> I have an infrared converted Nikon d700, I would like to able
Am Mo., 27. Mai 2019 um 18:43 Uhr schrieb Gabriel CANIVET <
gabriel.cani...@imt-atlantique.net>:
> Hello,
> I am a French engineering student and I'm currently working on a
> presentation of the ecosystem around GIMP for my Software Economy course.
> I found most of my answers on gimp.org and
Hello,
if you have an 8bit image it's from 0-255, if you have 16, or 32bit images
you get the values from 0-1.
Regards,
Tobias
Am Mo., 13. Mai 2019 um 11:45 Uhr schrieb 北嶋 凌 :
> Hello.
> I use GIMP ver.2.10.10.0 on Windows 7.
>
> I have a question about Histogram window.
> (Windows > Dockable
Hi Rick,
as Guy already wrote, Gimp 2.8 only supports 8-bit. Gimp 2.10 supports
16-bit as internal format and in the raw loader. And perhaps you are
interested, Gimp 2.10 has support for the HGT file format, gathered by
the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM). I blogged about it here:
Am Mo., 15. Okt. 2018 um 16:38 Uhr schrieb Helmut Jarausch via
gimp-user-list :
>
> I have elobrated his method a bit coming up with (calling it
> ShowImageLocation)
>
> #!/bin/bash
> qutebrowser `exiftool -c "%.6f" $1 | grep "GPS Position" | \
> sed -r -e 's|^.*: ([0-9]+\.[0-9]+) ([NS]),
Hi,
darktable has a map view.
https://www.darktable.org/usermanual/en/map_chapter.html
And I wrote some darktable Lua scripts toake the geo information more
useful:
http://dablogter.blogspot.com/2017/04/darktable-geotoolbox-script.html?m=1