hello!
I'm scanning two old magazines that were printed using a 'spirit
duplicator', better known as a 'ditto machine'. The magazines are
overall well preserved, but have faded badly in some parts, and some of
my scans are coming out looking like this:
http://textzi.net/02.png
http://textzi.
Guess it would be all hand work restoration.
On Sun, 05 Feb 2006 11:01:11 +0200, ivan lópez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
http://textzi.net/02.png
http://textzi.net/04.png
Would any of you have any suggestions on how to go about restoring these
images?
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Pagarbiai Vytautas
Xandros 3.0.2 OCE
Joao S. O. Bueno Calligaris wrote:
On Friday 03 February 2006 11:07 am, Chris Spencer wrote:
Hi Chris,
There is a way to apply a transform to multiple layers - you have to
link then together (in the layers dialog click at the side of the
"eye" icon, which indicates visibility).
Linked layers
ivan lópez wrote:
> I'm scanning two old magazines that were printed using a 'spirit
> duplicator', better known as a 'ditto machine'. The magazines are
> overall well preserved, but have faded badly in some parts, and some
> of my scans are coming out looking like this:
>
> http://textzi.net/02.pn
OK, this began as a question about paths, but now I think it combines paths
with layers.
With the help of eye-cons in the paths dialog, I can work on one path at
a time, and have the other ones invisible until I want to see them all.
Great.
But it seems as if the paths don't just live in one lay
Hi list!
Is it possible to do with the gimp (automatically?) what www.scanR.com does?
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