I'm your one of the first subscribers... nice to see you that you have now putting so much interesting videos... keep it up do you remembered me? I've asked your pc requirements in one of your videos... Benny Space Speed Art
Thanks for your suggestions, but there are already many Gimp tutorials for beginners, and I think they have covered Gimp in a very user-friendly manner.
Hello, my friend, just had an idea: many Linux and Windows users have big problems to install plug-ins in Gimp. (When I was a beginner I had these problems too). Wouldn't it make sense if you would provide an Appimage for Linux and a portable version of the current Gimp (2.10.34) for Windows that contains all the plug-ins you present on your website? I think many would be very happy if you could still integrate Gmic and the Resynthesizer. With kind regards Mic 🙂
I think this problem is also being considered by the Gimp devs; they are trying to implement a better and easier plugin manager, and one dev is currently working on integrating Resynthesizer directly into Gimp. I think their implementation will be much better than my efforts. A better way to get this feature into gimp, is we should help gimp dev, in this way we can get the features and also it will help overall user base.
@@pixcores I have already heard about this plugin manager and hope that it will become a reality in the stable version 3.0. I don't understand why the resynthesizer (or any other similar tool) was not implemented in Gimp a long time ago. Such repair tools are absolutely standard in any good image editing program. But I'm very happy to hear that the resynthesizer is being worked on directly in Gimp! I myself am an experienced Gimp user, but unfortunately I can't program. That's why I support the developers every year with a larger donation. May I ask you in which country you live in Asia, how you came to Gimp and what your first name is? 🙂
Sorry for replying late, and I don't usually like to identify myself by country as I think it hinders the coordination potential for us humans, but I am from India, and I am not as experienced a Gimp user as most, but I have been using Gimp since 2019. That was also the time I got interested in image manipulation and editing to make them cool, for I originally used Photoshop but transitioned to Gimp, and in an attempt to test how much of my Photoshop knowledge transferred over to Gimp, I learned Gimp much faster and also developed my own workflow for working in Gimp. And many advanced Photoshop techniques have a fairly easy way to replicate them in Gimp; most people just don't have a reference point for experimenting with Gimp's provided tools.
@@pixcores Hello, dear Freud! I can understand that you do not want to make your identity public, not even your first name or nickname. For me it has never been important from which country a person comes, but if he has a good character. India is a great country about which I know very little, because it is so unimaginably far away for me. Lately, however, we've been hearing more and more about India here in Europe because the political situation is so tense because of the Ukraine conflict. You're right: many users don't engage intensively with Gimp, and then when the workflow doesn't work the way they want, they're very quick to say that Gimp is a bad program. This is pure nonsense! At the moment I am working intensively with Krita, which is actually a painting program and originates from my home country, Germany. For my personal workflow I could achieve comparable results as with Gimp and Photoshop. I am very fond of Krita (in combination with Darktable). With Krita, Gimp and Darktable behind me, I don't look back on Adobe's products anymore. Many greetings from Germany Mic 🙂
Actually, I just forgot that you also asked for my name. It's not that I don't want to make myself public, but rather that many people know me quite well on the Discord server and in my other works. My name is Sujeet Kumar, and I am around 20. Yeah, I used Krita; it has a great interface and is quite amazing for drawing. Unfortunately, my drawings are still below average, so I haven't tried Krita much, but I know it's as good or even better than many commercial offerings. I mostly focus on open-source software. Right now, I am not making Gimp-related content because I am waiting for Gimp 3.
The newer gimp version will come with a non destructive editing feature, you can access it right now, although it's still in active development but for me it's stable enough.
@@pixcores yea I checked that, it's really good, but this is only working for effects and filters, But for transform function like scale, crop, rotation, there is no non destructive
I think full non-destructive editing will be available in future versions of Gimp. I've checked the latest version, and the feature is still under development but is stable enough for me to use.
A perfect video both for beginners of gimp and person who want to move to gimp from Photoshop...
Underrated video. Thanks a lot.
I am new at gimp and your chanell
really hope youll bacome famous on the future man your doing great work
I'm glad you liked my videos. 😊👍
I'm your one of the first subscribers...
nice to see you that you have now putting so much interesting videos... keep it up
do you remembered me? I've asked your pc requirements in one of your videos... Benny Space Speed Art
Yeah, i remembered you, thank you for your support, and now my PC specs have changed: CPU: Ryzen 5 5600X, GTX 1060 6 GB, and 16 GB of RAM.
@@pixcores thanks 😁😁
Good.
Hello, I use Linux. I do not have a black theme like you. Is there a link to download the theme?
Make a GIMP tutorial series for beginners!
Thanks for your suggestions, but there are already many Gimp tutorials for beginners, and I think they have covered Gimp in a very user-friendly manner.
@@pixcores Even if there are many GIMP tutorials, you can still make a beginner series.
Hello, my friend, just had an idea: many Linux and Windows users have big problems to install plug-ins in Gimp. (When I was a beginner I had these problems too). Wouldn't it make sense if you would provide an Appimage for Linux and a portable version of the current Gimp (2.10.34) for Windows that contains all the plug-ins you present on your website? I think many would be very happy if you could still integrate Gmic and the Resynthesizer.
With kind regards
Mic 🙂
I think this problem is also being considered by the Gimp devs; they are trying to implement a better and easier plugin manager, and one dev is currently working on integrating Resynthesizer directly into Gimp.
I think their implementation will be much better than my efforts.
A better way to get this feature into gimp, is we should help gimp dev, in this way we can get the features and also it will help overall user base.
@@pixcores I have already heard about this plugin manager and hope that it will become a reality in the stable version 3.0. I don't understand why the resynthesizer (or any other similar tool) was not implemented in Gimp a long time ago. Such repair tools are absolutely standard in any good image editing program. But I'm very happy to hear that the resynthesizer is being worked on directly in Gimp! I myself am an experienced Gimp user, but unfortunately I can't program. That's why I support the developers every year with a larger donation.
May I ask you in which country you live in Asia, how you came to Gimp and what your first name is? 🙂
Sorry for replying late, and I don't usually like to identify myself by country as I think it hinders the coordination potential for us humans, but I am from India, and I am not as experienced a Gimp user as most, but I have been using Gimp since 2019. That was also the time I got interested in image manipulation and editing to make them cool, for I originally used Photoshop but transitioned to Gimp, and in an attempt to test how much of my Photoshop knowledge transferred over to Gimp, I learned Gimp much faster and also developed my own workflow for working in Gimp.
And many advanced Photoshop techniques have a fairly easy way to replicate them in Gimp; most people just don't have a reference point for experimenting with Gimp's provided tools.
@@pixcores Hello, dear Freud!
I can understand that you do not want to make your identity public, not even your first name or nickname. For me it has never been important from which country a person comes, but if he has a good character. India is a great country about which I know very little, because it is so unimaginably far away for me. Lately, however, we've been hearing more and more about India here in Europe because the political situation is so tense because of the Ukraine conflict.
You're right: many users don't engage intensively with Gimp, and then when the workflow doesn't work the way they want, they're very quick to say that Gimp is a bad program. This is pure nonsense!
At the moment I am working intensively with Krita, which is actually a painting program and originates from my home country, Germany. For my personal workflow I could achieve comparable results as with Gimp and Photoshop. I am very fond of Krita (in combination with Darktable). With Krita, Gimp and Darktable behind me, I don't look back on Adobe's products anymore.
Many greetings from Germany
Mic 🙂
Actually, I just forgot that you also asked for my name. It's not that I don't want to make myself public, but rather that many people know me quite well on the Discord server and in my other works.
My name is Sujeet Kumar, and I am around 20.
Yeah, I used Krita; it has a great interface and is quite amazing for drawing. Unfortunately, my drawings are still below average, so I haven't tried Krita much, but I know it's as good or even better than many commercial offerings. I mostly focus on open-source software. Right now, I am not making Gimp-related content because I am waiting for Gimp 3.
gegl effects where link?
I fixed it, try again 👍👍
why incorrect discord link?
The link have been fixed, please try again
One problem with gimp is it's destructive work flow
The newer gimp version will come with a non destructive editing feature, you can access it right now, although it's still in active development but for me it's stable enough.
@@pixcores yea I checked that, it's really good, but this is only working for effects and filters,
But for transform function like scale, crop, rotation, there is no non destructive
I think full non-destructive editing will be available in future versions of Gimp. I've checked the latest version, and the feature is still under development but is stable enough for me to use.
@@pixcores yea , I love gimp also