It's poll time
Admin Post: 15 August 2010 14:21![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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What do you use GIMP mostly for?
I don't use it at all.
1 (2.2%)
Photo edits (cropping, resizing, getting rid of red eyes, etc)
32 (71.1%)
Icon making
33 (73.3%)
Fanart
14 (31.1%)
Digital art
7 (15.6%)
Other (please comment)
3 (6.7%)
What do you use Inkscape mostly for?
I don't use it at all.
33 (73.3%)
Fanart
3 (6.7%)
Digital art
3 (6.7%)
Geometric objects
5 (11.1%)
3D objects
2 (4.4%)
Other (please comment)
5 (11.1%)
What do you want to see in this community?
Tutorials
40 (90.9%)
Resources such as fonts, scripts and brushes
34 (77.3%)
Photo editing tricks
30 (68.2%)
Tips about icon making
30 (68.2%)
Challenges
4 (9.1%)
Answers to questions I or others might have about GIMP/Inkscape
37 (84.1%)
Other (please comment)
0 (0.0%)
When it comes to GIMP, you consider yourself
a beginner
11 (23.9%)
someone who has basic knowledge and skills
27 (58.7%)
someone who has proficient knowledge and skills
8 (17.4%)
an expert
0 (0.0%)
When it comes to Inkscape, you consider yourself
a beginner
29 (82.9%)
someone who has basic knowledge and skills
5 (14.3%)
someone who has proficient knowledge and skills
1 (2.9%)
an expert
0 (0.0%)
(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 12:51 (UTC)Before my rats chewed through my tablet cable I've tried using Gimp for inking and coloring, but I had trouble to apply most digital fanart tutorials, because the brushes in Gimp are apparently quite different from what Photoshop has.
I also tried to use Inkscape once, thinking it might give me nice sleek lineart (for things like my icons, which I draw), but it was an older version and I didn't really manage to make it work, and the newer versions somehow don't compite on my older Linux version on my laptop so I have given up on that.
(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 16:18 (UTC)I almost forgot - as of 2.5 (I think!) Gimp has the ability to use Photoshop brushes. Just put them in your .gimp/brushes folder.
(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 16:35 (UTC)And I think I need to upgrade my Gimp... I don't really want fancy brushes but from the screenshots it always looked as if in photoshop you could somehow pick different pressure and line characteristics of the brush tool with differnt brushes rather than just form/pattern, so if Gimp can now do that as well, that would be awesome.
(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 22:01 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 23:07 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 23:17 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 23:33 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 19 August 2010 23:07 (UTC)The tool they work best and most fluidly with is the ink tool (which in newer versions is the icon of the ink pot, before that was a pen nib); with other tools, pressing the + next to "brush dynamics" gets you the menus.
...as for color correction, as far as I can tell, that's just not as good on gimp as photoshop. I spent ages trying to find a way to erase blueline that worked as well as the photoshop methods do, and finally decided there just wasn't one.
(no subject)
Date: 19 August 2010 23:16 (UTC)I really need to upgrade my GIMP apparently, because I don't see "brush dynamics" anywhere.
(no subject)
Date: 19 August 2010 23:53 (UTC)...I have just checked and I thought I was up-to-date, but my version's two years old already actually. Um. So maybe I should fix that too before I start giving advice.
(no subject)
Date: 20 August 2010 00:02 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 20 August 2010 00:23 (UTC)(My tablet also has electrical tape on the cord, but it hasn't interfered with functioning yet - as opposed to the power cord of the laptop, which is a horrid macgyvered thing that loses connection if you breathe wrong and requires re-taping every two days as it burns through the most recent layer of tape. It makes strong men cry.)
If you're that far behind, I will warn you that around the first 2.6 version, there were some pretty major changes, both in feel and in stuff like the way free select works, so it takes some getting used to.
(no subject)
Date: 11 September 2010 14:45 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 12 September 2010 02:09 (UTC)This is traditional because some kinds of early duplication processes made it easy to filter out the blueline and only get the black inks, kind of like greenscreen in film - if you've ever seen original art of old comics, for example, you can usually see the blue pencil lines under the ink, which wouldn't get picked up when they were converted for printing.
In Photoshop there's a method that works pretty well to filter out the blue pencils if you scan in an inked graphic; but there's something about GIMP's equivalents of those filters that just never worked nearly as well, no matter how much I fine-tuned them - it would either leave in too much of the blueline pencils or erase too many of the bluish pixels in the inks, and I never found a good tutorial on it for GIMP. But it's possible that there's a GIMP tool that does it better than PS that I just never found.
(no subject)
Date: 12 September 2010 08:49 (UTC)Without a special tool for it, I think it would be tricky, but gimp may be able to do it in a reasonable way. The first thing I would do is to look at the range of colour values in the line, and take it from there.
Maybe this would be a worthwhile challenge to offer people? You can't be the only person needing this.
Meanwhile, if by some remote chance you are near the same bit of planet that I am, I could repair/replace the dodgy cables so that they stay repaired. I live in Bedfordshire, UK.
(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 13:04 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 13:30 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 14:53 (UTC)Inkscape - what's that?
(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 18:10 (UTC)It's an open source vector graphics editor application, similar to Adobe Illustrator. It's been added to the community based on people's choice/interest. You can read more about the decision in an earlier entry.
(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 15:02 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 17:41 (UTC)I'm also very against challenges. And I realize as a lurker my say doesn't amount to much, but there it is. There are more comms then I can count that are based on challenges and I like that this is just a place to learn. It makes it less intimidating and far more likely that I'll ask a question. One day.
(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 18:08 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 19:24 (UTC)I can't say how often I would participate in challenges but I do like the idea of people posting things they've done with GIMP/Inkscape and letting others ask questions. IDK, maybe every two weeks.
(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 22:13 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 15 August 2010 23:33 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 16 August 2010 18:57 (UTC)Part of the reason there aren't any graphics there right now is because I'm bad at it.
(no subject)
Date: 11 September 2010 14:53 (UTC)I recently installed Inkscape to edit the plot output from a pcb design program, KiCad (also FOSS). Since then I have used it to design the front panel label for a prototype item of electronic equipment - but due to inadequate knowledge, had to print it out several times, adjusting the size slightly each time, to make it fit.
With Gimp I do rather better, mostly editing photos for brightness and contrast, sharpness, colour balance etc. I used to use Corel photopaint, but technology and prices moved on, and so did I.