On Wed, 4 Mar 2020 22:48:00 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote: >I don't know what kind of animation software Jasc Animation Shop3 is. >I suspect that pixel graphic software such as Gimp or Krita could >maybe use layers to generate animated gifs in a flip book/stop motion >style. IOW you need to draw each picture. However, there are a lot of >tools with automation features for 2D as well as 3D animations. When I >tested synfig studio, perhaps more than a decade ago, it was way too >buggy and blender was way too complicated. IIRC I never tested any of >the other software. I installed white_dune, since I read that it is >used by primary school children, but at the moment I'm doing a music >band project with primary school children instead. > >http://wdune.ourproject.org/ >https://www.pencil2d.org/ >http://www.vpaint.org/ >https://opentoonz.github.io/ >https://morevnaproject.org/opentoonz/ >https://sourceforge.net/projects/tupi2d/ >https://synfig.org >http://www.blender.org >http://www.k-3d.org/ > >http://linuxstopmotion.org/index.html >https://www.gimp.org/ >https://krita.org/en/ > >Some time ago I used Folioscope on an iPadPro 3rd generation instead of >Linux. It's nice, but very primitive and limited. It generates animated >gifs.
PS: Some, but not all Windows software does run on wine, https://packages.ubuntu.com/eoan/wine . You could run quasi all Windows software, that doesn't run on wine and that doesn't require direct hardware access via Windows drivers, on a Windows guest running in a virtual machine, such as the easy to use virtualbox, https://packages.ubuntu.com/eoan/virtualbox . -- xubuntu-users mailing list [email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/xubuntu-users
