Re: [Gimp-user] (Mis?)use of jigsaw filter

2016-02-28 Thread Allan Topp


What you have suggested seems to me to work fine.  And seems to Inkscape 
likewise.


Can hardly wait to see if the laser cutter agrees with us.

Thanks so much.

It's all so easy ... when you know what you are doing.

Thanks again.


On 16-02-28 01:34 PM, Richard wrote:
This is not really something you can do in Inkscape because its bitmap 
trace necessarily traces both sides of each line.  However extracting 
the jigsaw pattern itself (albeit in bitmap form) is a simple 
operation in GIMP:


1 - Create a new layer, white, on top of the image.
2 - Execute a Jigsaw operation on that layer with a Highlight setting 
of zero. (a Bevel setting of 0px also works..)
3 - Go to the Layers > Transparency menu and perform a Color To Alpha 
using white as transparency.


If you absolutely need the cutting lines in vector form, what would be 
ideal here is for the Jigsaw filter to be able to output it as a GIMP 
path object instead of painting it onto the target layer but the 
plug-in doesn't do that in its current form.


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Re: [Gimp-user] (Mis?)use of jigsaw filter

2016-02-28 Thread Richard
> Date: Sun, 28 Feb 2016 07:24:04 -0500
> From: ad...@ncf.ca
> To: gimp-user-list@gnome.org
> Subject: [Gimp-user] (Mis?)use of jigsaw filter
> 
> I love the output of the jigsaw filter and would like to use it to laser 
> cut some jigsaw puzzles.
> 
> However I have been unable to produce the obligatory single 0.001" line 
> that the laser cutter requires.
> 
> Customarily I would use Inkscape to produce the final cutting template 
> but Inkscape treats the GIMP produced image as two lines with fill 
> between them.  Removing the fill is simple but, of course, leaves the 
> double lines.
> 
> Does anyone have a solution in GIMP - or indeed in Inkscape - for this?
> 
> Much appreciate any assistance.
> 
> TIA

This is not really something you can do in Inkscape because its bitmap trace 
necessarily traces both sides of each line.  However extracting the jigsaw 
pattern itself (albeit in bitmap form) is a simple operation in GIMP:

1 - Create a new layer, white, on top of the image.
2 - Execute a Jigsaw operation on that layer with a Highlight setting of zero. 
(a Bevel setting of 0px also works.)
3 - Go to the Layers > Transparency menu and perform a Color To Alpha using 
white as transparency.

If you absolutely need the cutting lines in vector form, what would be ideal 
here is for the Jigsaw filter to be able to output it as a GIMP path object 
instead of painting it onto the target layer but the plug-in doesn't do that in 
its current form.


-- Stratadrake
strata_ran...@hotmail.com

Numbers may not lie, but neither do they tell the whole truth.


  
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[Gimp-user] (Mis?)use of jigsaw filter

2016-02-28 Thread Allan Topp
I love the output of the jigsaw filter and would like to use it to laser 
cut some jigsaw puzzles.


However I have been unable to produce the obligatory single 0.001" line 
that the laser cutter requires.


Customarily I would use Inkscape to produce the final cutting template 
but Inkscape treats the GIMP produced image as two lines with fill 
between them.  Removing the fill is simple but, of course, leaves the 
double lines.


Does anyone have a solution in GIMP - or indeed in Inkscape - for this?

Much appreciate any assistance.

TIA


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