if the fonts are on top of transparency, try using the semi-flatten
filter BEFORE indexing. it makes the ofnts much cleaner usually.
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Am Montag, 23. April 2001 13:49 schrieben Sie:
> On Sun, Apr 22, 2001 at 09:08:33AM -0700, Jeff Trefftzs wrote:
> > First, remember that the Gimp does images, not text. So your
> > fonts are being rendered as images, not as vector text. You
> > didn't say what form of Gimp output you are using:
On Sun, Apr 22, 2001 at 07:10:30PM +0200, Mat Colton wrote:
>
> I always do double sized images and scale then down, including the text.
> Looks a lot better then. I got this tip from a Photoshop workshop, works
> fine, especially for web design.
I'll keep that in mind, thanks.
Mike
On Sun, Apr 22, 2001 at 09:08:33AM -0700, Jeff Trefftzs wrote:
> First, remember that the Gimp does images, not text. So your
> fonts are being rendered as images, not as vector text. You
> didn't say what form of Gimp output you are using: are you
> saving the images as GIFs or jpegs? If G
Am Sonntag, 22. April 2001 17:09 schrieben Sie:
> Hey people. My wife is attempting to do web-design using the Gimp for
> her graphics, and she's having some problems getting really good-looking
> fonts to work for her. We installed xfstt for true-types, but they still
> look fairly grainy.
>
First, remember that the Gimp does images, not text. So your
fonts are being rendered as images, not as vector text. You
didn't say what form of Gimp output you are using: are you
saving the images as GIFs or jpegs? If GIFs, then you lose some
quality when you convert to indexed - you may
Hey people. My wife is attempting to do web-design using the Gimp for her
graphics, and she's having some problems getting really good-looking fonts to
work for her. We installed xfstt for true-types, but they still look fairly
grainy.
Is everyone satisfied with the look of the fonts avai