View allAll Photos Tagged gimp
Original photo by: the photography muse
Edited with permission from the copyright owner by: Me - using Gimp
See the orginial here: falon23
See the group discussion here: pimp my pixels discussion-butterfly girl
OK, this isn't done in inkscape... it was done in GIMP but inspired by Richard's torn paper screencast... The Droste effect was done via this tutorial: www.flickr.com/photos/joshsommers/sets/72157594515046947/
Another gimp tutorial finished. From Putera Aladin Blogspot. I added a little label down in the right side by means of using blur effects and some star brushes. So that here it's.
A rare bronze trout migrating upstream. This individual was probably 4 feet long and several hundred pounds.
After deciding to use Cecil De Quinn's idea of gimp masks, I also found inspiration from Zandra Rhode's Conceptual Collection shown at the V&A. I liked to experiment, as she did, with tears, safety pins and chains on my mask. Zandra Rhodes quotes "It was a journey into London street culture" that influenced this collection and I thought it fitted well with my Soho theme.
Based on a simple low-quality smartphone (HTC Wildfire) photo taken at Winterkunstkabinett at Gallery Nomad facebook.com/gallerynomadberlin in Berlin.
A tough, invasive weed, Purple Loosestrife has pretty much taken over this farmer's field. For all its great colour, it is the subject of fairly dedicated efforts to eradicate it from wet areas here in Ontario. - JW
Taken with Panasonic FZ30. PPin GIMP:minimal - curves and sharpen then scale,
p1110310adjx1024
GIMP allows me to erase some shadows and color in my lower lip (knocked out by brightness adjustments). If only it could help me get more light/signal for the point and shoot. How do people get such crisp pictures?
Just a quick conversion of my Ragnaros screenshot using the GIMP. I just applied the Oilify filter and upped the settings a bit
Con un poco de habilidad y un programa libre ( “ gratis “ ) ,se pueden arreglar muchos detalles de una foto , solo dependes de tu pericia y sobre todo de tu paciencia .
En esta fotografía he usado el programa Gimp 2.6 ( para Windows ) , es de libre distribución y consigues buenos resultados.
La cola del caballo esta pegada de otra foto y la crin del cuello esta construida desde cero , la imagen general de la fotografía esta arreglada combinando diferentes opciones del programa y todavía se puede mejorar mas , depende de la pericia de cada uno .
Se puede retocar una fotografía pero es importante hacer con la camara “una buena foto” , la base es fundamental .
A bit over exposed, but I still like this photo. This building used to be the Irish Parliament House.