The Alpha to Selection command is a quicker way to select all the non-transparent pixels on a layer (5:10). You can find it by right-clicking on the layer in the Layer dialogue, or from the menubar (Layer > Transparency > Alpha to Selection).
This is an amazing tutorial, thanks so much! I'm always amazed at how much you can really do with gimp so long as you have the skillset and know how so bids like this really help
Hi, great video thank you. I learnt new things. Do you have a video showing how to create a glistening effect. e.g an image that looks like it's got tiny white dots that flicker like stars, making the image looks like it's sparkling.
you should make this video addable to playlists I'm building a Gimp lesson guide so I can always refer back to it and this glow video is so awesome! thanks.
For me when i do the dodge mode i used the same color but it becomes green and not orange Edit: i tried it with different colors and it is the same so only orange is weird but i dont have a free select tool so i had to draw the lighter layer.
You jump all over the place and you don't really explain the need for so many layers. I don't see a reason why you need so many layers, why can't you do it all in one? It's very confusing.
The reason is simple, what if you want to change something or move something around later? Obviously you couldn't if everything is glued to the same layer!
@@vkaa3k190 I'm not sure how that applies, as you still wouldn't be able to edit or move separate objects around since everything is on the same layer. Opacity and size doesn't replace are brush settings, not a replacement for layers. Think about it like a blender. If you put strawberries, bananas, and kiwis in a blender and blend them, you can't get the individual fruits back. But if you keep them in separate containers, like layers, you can eat each one individually.
@@jaxsharp I've gotten similar results to his without using those layers. Layers are definitely needed, but not here. He made a simple task much more complex.
3 years later and still helping people. Thank you Kai!
This is how you do a tutorial. Nice and simple, confident, clear, and on-point. Nice one :)
I got confused 2 minutes into the vid, but it's great stuff
The Alpha to Selection command is a quicker way to select all the non-transparent pixels on a layer (5:10). You can find it by right-clicking on the layer in the Layer dialogue, or from the menubar (Layer > Transparency > Alpha to Selection).
Thx
wow what a good tutorial!!! Very straightforward!
This is an amazing tutorial, thanks so much! I'm always amazed at how much you can really do with gimp so long as you have the skillset and know how so bids like this really help
this was the first ever tut ive done on gimp thank you alot!
You are breathtaking man. Thanks
Great effect. Very quick tutorial, but that's what the pause button is for. Thanks for showing the extra mode effects. Really helped.
no joke 10/10 tutorial thank you so much kind sir
I really appreciate that :)
awesome thank you for this tutorial
Great job and works perfectly!
So much valuable information in a short video! Thanks a lot!
Thanks for doing it
Hi, great video thank you. I learnt new things. Do you have a video showing how to create a glistening effect. e.g an image that looks like it's got tiny white dots that flicker like stars, making the image looks like it's sparkling.
Nice work 👍
it still gonna take me a while to learn whole things but i have learned quite a lot in this month
Love this tutorial, I've come back to it a few times. Any tips on how to animate it so it's a glowing pulse?
Really cool effect, thanks for making a tutorial on this! I enjoyed it
Awesome man
you should make this video addable to playlists I'm building a Gimp lesson guide so I can always refer back to it and this glow video is so awesome! thanks.
Not sure what you mean? You should be able to add this to a playlist. It should also be embeddable. And thanks for your comment!
for some reason it did not let me but ill try again! @@TutsByKai
love it!
nice thanks for this tutorial, it was helpful
It would be nice if you took that knight's helmet and made the front visor see through.
Thanks for the tutorial 😀
10000 on comedy, " this knight is a pumpkin on the inside, idk "
Thank you my good sir.
convinced me that i do not need photoshop. lol thanks mate
Thanks
Welcome!
For me when i do the dodge mode i used the same color but it becomes green and not orange
Edit: i tried it with different colors and it is the same so only orange is weird but i dont have a free select tool so i had to draw the lighter layer.
Hey love your Contents. They are short and effective. Can you make tutorial on how to add douge and Burn effects using gimp.
How do I do this with my Wii nunchucks?
Vidio idea-How to make a icon for stuff like mac/phone
Like make a series of this
Dope asf
thankss
🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
💪😎
Hello, man. Send-me this image in original?
like it but man lay off the caffeine😆
I don't drink coffee! :D
You jump all over the place and you don't really explain the need for so many layers. I don't see a reason why you need so many layers, why can't you do it all in one? It's very confusing.
The reason is simple, what if you want to change something or move something around later? Obviously you couldn't if everything is glued to the same layer!
@@TutsByKai How is this better than simply choosing a paint brush and adjusting its opacity and size?
@@vkaa3k190 I'm not sure how that applies, as you still wouldn't be able to edit or move separate objects around since everything is on the same layer. Opacity and size doesn't replace are brush settings, not a replacement for layers. Think about it like a blender. If you put strawberries, bananas, and kiwis in a blender and blend them, you can't get the individual fruits back. But if you keep them in separate containers, like layers, you can eat each one individually.
Using multiple layers is like , the standard/proper way to do any kind of editing lol
@@jaxsharp I've gotten similar results to his without using those layers. Layers are definitely needed, but not here. He made a simple task much more complex.
good video @tutsbykai 😀😙😀😙😀😙😀😙😀😙😀😙