I would use the path tool to trace the outline of the bottle, then
change the path to a selection. Then you can float the selection and
put the layer on a different background. The path tool takes a bit of
practice but I think it will produce the best results in this situation.
Tom wrote:
Tha
On Tue, 2004-11-02 at 01:13 -0500, Tom wrote:
> (new to gimp)
Welcome. :-)
>
> Hi,
>
> I would like to change the background color of a photo,
> (preferably with a gradient or shadow effect)
> but it's a single layer (jpg). I tried to 'select by color'
> and replace it, but the edges of the ob
Thanks Eric. Here it is.
On Tuesday 02 November 2004 00:14, Eric Pierce wrote:
> There are a billion different ways to do what you're talking about. But it
> really comes down to the quality/properties of the image you have.
>
> Show us what you have.
>
> On Tue, Nov 02, 2004 at 01:13:21AM -0500
There are a billion different ways to do what you're talking about. But it really
comes down to the quality/properties of the image you have.
Show us what you have.
On Tue, Nov 02, 2004 at 01:13:21AM -0500, Tom wrote:
> (new to gimp)
>
> Hi,
>
> I would like to change the background color o
(new to gimp)
Hi,
I would like to change the background color of a photo,
(preferably with a gradient or shadow effect)
but it's a single layer (jpg). I tried to 'select by color'
and replace it, but the edges of the object in the foreground
turn out jagged and looks bad. I also tried to invert
On Mon, 1 Nov 2004 19:46:03 -0500
gilson redrick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I downloaded the 2.0.5.tar.bz2. './configure' went OK. 'Make' went OK until I
> got to
> << make[3]: Entering directory `/usr/local/src/gimp-2.0.5/app/core'
> if gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I. -I../.. -I../.. -I../../app
>
hi,
i heard that gimp-2.2pre would be out and threw together some new
tutorials to show off a few of the new things.
http://carol.gimp.org/gimp/2.1/
a preview of only a few of the new gimp previews (thanks to david odin):
http://carol.gimp.org/gimp/2.1/previews/
you can configure your toolbox
Hi!
I downloaded the 2.0.5.tar.bz2. './configure' went OK. 'Make' went OK until I
got to
<< make[3]: Entering directory `/usr/local/src/gimp-2.0.5/app/core'
if gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I. -I../.. -I../.. -I../../app
-I/usr/include/gtk-2.0 -I/usr/include/glib-2.0 -I/usr/lib/glib-2.0/include
-I/u
Hi,
we are glad to announce the availability of the first pre-release for
GIMP 2.2. More than half a year after GIMP 2.0 saw the light of day,
we are now close to finish work on it's successor, GIMP 2.2. You can
download a first pre-release from ftp.gimp.org and it's mirrors:
http://gimp.org/d
Hi Sven,
This is much more complicated than it used to be.
How did you use to do it?
Well, there was a "Symbol" font that it used to work just fine. At least
when using Gimp 1.x on a RedHat 8.0.
Does anyone know a simpler solution?
gucharmap can install a GTK+ input module which you can then
Does anyone know a simpler solution?
Just do the steps 4 through 6. You write in english and in the image
you see it in greek (it is a little bit weird, but you won't write
your entire life story this way...).
No, it also appears in latin letters in the image.
An alternative would be to select a
Hi,
Miguel Ortiz LombardÃa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've somehow solved this myself by:
>
> 1. Opening the 'map character' application (gnome menu)
> 2. Selecting the "Standard Symbols L" font
> 3. Choosing whatever letter I want and copy it
> 4. Opening in Gimp the text tool
> 5. Selecting
On Mon, 01 Nov 2004 17:09:03 +, Miguel Ortiz Lombardía wrote:
> I've somehow solved this myself by:
>
> 1. Opening the 'map character' application (gnome menu)
> 2. Selecting the "Standard Symbols L" font
> 3. Choosing whatever letter I want and copy it
> 4. Opening in Gimp the text tool
> 5.
I've somehow solved this myself by:
1. Opening the 'map character' application (gnome menu)
2. Selecting the "Standard Symbols L" font
3. Choosing whatever letter I want and copy it
4. Opening in Gimp the text tool
5. Selecting the "Standard Symbols L" font
6. Pasting the copied letter
This is much
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