I have alot of plugins that I use in the older version of The Gimp and do not
want to
lose them. I was wondering can I have both the new and old version of The Gimp
installed
on Windows XP without having a conflict. Or do I need to install Gimp 2.4
somewhere else
other than C:\Program Files
_
> Von: "D.Jones (aka) Capnhud" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> I have alot of plugins that I use in the older version of The Gimp and do
> not want to lose them.
If you kept them in your personal plug-ins directory, they will even be copied
automatically. Most of them seem to work.
> I was wondering can
Hi, list
I want to translate the introduce page of gimp 2.4.0 in gimp.org
this page, http://gimp.org/release-notes/gimp-2.4.html
who does maintain this page?
BTW, I want to translate and post on my site, http://gimp.kr
my site is not a commercial site. just a tutorial site for gimp.
Can I do thi
Hello,
On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 19:55:48 +0900, Choi, Ji-Hui wrote:
> Hi, list
>
> I want to translate the introduce page of gimp 2.4.0 in gimp.org
> this page, http://gimp.org/release-notes/gimp-2.4.html
> who does maintain this page?
>
> BTW, I want to translate and post on my site, http://gimp.kr
On 10/25/07, Byung-Hee HWANG <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm also interested in the translation. What can I do for you?
> Of course, I use Gimp for editing and viewing graphic images..
>
thank you, Byung-Hee
I'll send you a personal mail.
but now I need some belief that I won't violate any copyri
On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 20:40:36 +0900, Choi, Ji-Hui wrote:
> On 10/25/07, Byung-Hee HWANG <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'm also interested in the translation. What can I do for you?
> > Of course, I use Gimp for editing and viewing graphic images..
> >
> thank you, Byung-Hee
> I'll send you a person
I would like to be able to produce a black and white negative image from
an ordinary colour image. The effect I would like to produce would be to
imitate what one would get if you took a colour, positive transparency
and made a contact print on to either orthographic or lithographic film.
Thus, blu
On Thursday 25 October 2007 10:18, norman wrote:
> I would like to be able to produce a black and white negative image
> from an ordinary colour image. The effect I would like to produce
> would be to imitate what one would get if you took a colour,
> positive transparency and made a contact print
On Thursday 25 October 2007 23:18:04 norman wrote:
> I would like to be able to produce a black and white negative
> image from an ordinary colour image.
I'm lazy, so desaturating on luminosity works well enough for
me. If I wanted to alter the colours, I'd put the image through
a colour-map first
It seems you would basically want an inverted copy of the blue channel
with white regions being transparent. There are dozens of ways to
accomplish this. I would propose the following:
Decompose you image to RGB components.
In the new image, hide the red and green layers.
Add a layermask to th
> > I would like to be able to produce a black and white negative image
> > from an ordinary colour image. The effect I would like to produce
> > would be to imitate what one would get if you took a colour,
> > positive transparency and made a contact print on to either
> > orthographic or lithogr
< snip >
> Decompose you image to RGB components.
> In the new image, hide the red and green layers.
> Add a layermask to the blue layer, initialized to a "Grayscale copy of
> the layer".
> Fill the blue layer with black.
>
> OPTIONAL: Most orthochromatic film would respond to some extent to
There should be no white in the resulting image. When you decompose to
RGB ("Colors->Components->Decompose"), you end up with a grayscale
image with three layers -- one each for the red, green, and blue
components.
When you add the layermasks, you are basically making the the black
parts o
Oops, I just realized that what you describe may be attributed to the
fact that GIMP will display a dark gray/light gray checkerboard to
indicate transparent regions. Perhaps you have created your lithograph
correctly but misinterpreted this representation of transparency.
You might try crea
(Sorry I just realised I sent this directly to you by accident here is a resend to the list.)
You should really do work in "xcf" which is Gimp's native image
format. (you can also save a full copy of your work in xcf and go for a
walk or something then reload and continue from where you left o
Hi,
On Thu, 2007-10-25 at 03:16 -0700, D.Jones (aka) Capnhud wrote:
> I have alot of plugins that I use in the older version of The Gimp and do not
> want to
> lose them.
The plug-in API is backward compatible. All plug-ins that worked with
GIMP 2.0 or GIMP 2.2 are going to work with GIMP 2.4.
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