On 21-Mar-13 19:28, sonicbluegt wrote:
Thanks everyone for the help!
Why don't do this in Inkscape?
You can import an image and use it as backdrop. Then export everything
as jpeg or whatever.
Hope it helps
mario
I may give this a shot. If I can export as a TGA file f
On Thu, 2013-03-21 at 12:11 +0100, sonicbluegt wrote:
> [...]In Inkscape, I can resize the image to be 1024x1024, zoom in, and it
> "redraws" the image with no aliasing (as a vector should).
>
> However, when I do the same in GIMP, it aliases, as though it's no longer a
> vector and is drawn as a
Thanks everyone for the help!
>Why don't do this in Inkscape?
>You can import an image and use it as backdrop. Then export everything
>as jpeg or whatever.
>Hope it helps
> mario
I may give this a shot. If I can export as a TGA file from Inkscape, then I'll
definitely be do
On 21-Mar-13 12:11, sonicbluegt wrote:
What I'm trying to do is overlay a design onto another image without aliasing.
What I'm ending up with, though, is no better (actually might be worse) than
just drawing the image in GIMP instead of importing a vectored version of the
same graphic.
Why d
> Date: Thu, 21 Mar 2013 12:11:44 +0100
> From: for...@gimpusers.com
> To: gimp-user-list@gnome.org
> CC: t...@gimpusers.com
> Subject: [Gimp-user] aliasing in vector images
>
> Thanks for the reply Steve!
>
> I think maybe my problem wasn't communicated from my e
Thanks for the reply Steve!
I think maybe my problem wasn't communicated from my end correctly.
I have an SVG file generated with a native resolution of 2048x2048 in Vector
Magic. In Inkscape, I can resize the image to be 1024x1024, zoom in, and it
"redraws" the image with no aliasing (as a vect
On 03/20/2013 07:08 PM, sonicbluegt wrote:
> Windows 7 64 home
> Gimp 2.8.4
>
> Import .svg file into gimp.. Image size 1024x1024 and smaller produces
> aliasing.
> Any ideas?
Using the Import dialog to increase the size of the output image in
pixels - doubling it or more - greatly reduces "norm
Windows 7 64 home
Gimp 2.8.4
Import .svg file into gimp.. Image size 1024x1024 and smaller produces aliasing.
Any ideas?
--
sonicbluegt (via www.gimpusers.com/forums)
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