Steve Kinney writes:
> If possible I would start over with a new signature and scan, at 300
> DPI or above, with black ink on white paper.
Scan in 'Lineart' settings, so you don't have shades of grey.
In the Gimp, set the mode to Color and proceed:
> Then, applying the filter Colors > Color to
Dirk writes:
> The whole situation boils down to the lack of character that is
> necessary for admitting a mistake and reversing this change in the
> workflow.
There's much to be said for the new behaviour. It would be better if
Ctrl-E just used the filename and properties from the imported file
Richard Gitschlag writes:
>> There's much to be said for the new behaviour. It would be better if
>> Ctrl-E just used the filename and properties from the imported file. The
>> first time it may even show a "File exists, overwrite" dialog.
>> Currently, Ctrl-E and Shift-Ctrl-E open the same expor
mahavisnujana ochoa writes:
> Couldn't have done it without Gimp.
> https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?
> fbid=609907939037104&set=a.185070871520815.50381.10537090282&type=3&theate
Great job!
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Any ideas how this will impact foto-editing?
www.lytro.com
-- Johan
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Noel Stoutenburg writes:
> ... the camera capturing
> "all the light from the scene", when in fact, the camera is only
> capturing the light from the scene that enters the camera, just like a
> more conventional digital camera. In the end there will still be an
> image that can be manipulated,
I
Frank Gore writes:
> Please note, this has absolutely nothing to do with using Gimp.
As I tried to explain in my other posting, as I understand it image
manipulation effectively becomes multi-dimensional.
An image from the LFE can be processed into a ordinary 2-dimensional
image, Gimp can hand
Arbol One writes:
> .. the letters are black and the document is in many colours but black.
> How can I isolate the black, thus the letters, from all the other
> colours ...
Are you sure that the letters are just black? Usually due to
anti-aliasing there are shaded colours around the black lette
Richard Gitschlag writes:
> It is true, however, that many professional and commercial apps do not
> make a save/export distinction and allow you to "save" your document
> in any supported filetype -- MS Word, for example. You can open/save a
> document in a non-native format at any time, all you
Alexandre Prokoudine writes:
> The problem I see in this thread is that few people tell us exactly
> what they do and then complain that we don't do the right thing for
> them.
Haven't tried 2.8 yet, but as I understand it:
- XCF is the native format for GIMP <-- GOOD
- everything else is an ex
Bummer...
Anyone managed to build Gimp 2.8 on Fedora 16, 15, 14, ...?
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wonderer writes:
> for more infos on that please take a look at
> http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/GIMP_2.8
What information does that provide w.r.t. the question I raised?
-- Johan
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Maurice writes:
> I would be most grateful if someone could confirm this (as it might be
> some setting I've missed):
>
> With Gimp 2.7.4 (and presumably later), if you select 'Text' (the big
> 'A'), then click somewhere on an image, two things will appear:
>
> (1) At the place where you
Maurice writes:
> For users of the Text facility, there is a handy tutorial:
> http://docs.gimp.org/2.8/en/gimp-image-text-management.html
Thanks! I needed some experimenting to get used to the new facility but
it sure looks handy and efficient. It still needs some work, though.
Since we no
Liam R E Quin writes:
> If that's not how the terms are used, please file a bug.
Done.
>> Changing the baseline using the semi-transparent tool box does not have
>> any effect, neither does changing the baseline in the text editor.
>
> They work fine here, but you have to have selected some tex
After a couple of days working with 2.8, I must say that I don't have
any problems with the Save / Export changes. I edited a bunch of JPGs
and also worked on XCFs. It feels quite natural that Save means the GIMP
native format, while everything else is Export.
Good job!
-- Johan
_
eduperez writes:
> Yes, I'm currently using Gimp 2.8 on Fedora 16, compiled it from
> source. There is a guide in this site at
> http://www.gimpusers.com/tutorials/compiling-gimp-for-ubuntu; it talks
> about Ubuntu, but pretty much everything applies to Fedora, or is easy
> to adapt.
Thanks for
Sicofante writes:
> “Save” means “overwrite the original file”, period
This is true for applications that simply on a specific file and can
store/restore all relevant informatin the that file format. This is,
indeed, the majority of applications.
However, several applications that deal with mor
eduperez writes:
> Yes, there are dependencies within the dependencies, but all of them
> can be installed using the same procedure; and, if you put everything
> under a separate directory (I used /opt/gimp-2.8, for example),
> dependencies included, then you should not experience any instability
Bludigo writes:
> the GIMP image properties say 900 x 572 pixels.
That's much too low... Either you took a low-res picture (simple mobile
phone?) or you downscaled it in the Gimp.
For a canvas print as you mentioned 3000x2000 is more realistic.
Check the original image, the one before you star
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