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Reply to: Bezier Lines

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Previously on "Bezier Lines"

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  • suityou01
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
    In Gimp, I did the following:
    1. Created and filled a rectangle;
    2. Selected the Path tool;
    3. Clicked outside the bottom edge of the rectangle to start a path;
    4. Clicked outside the right edge of the rectangle to add another point;
    5. Clicked below and to the right of the rectangle to add another point;
    6. Ctrl-clicked on the start point to close the path, thereby forming a triangle across the corner of the rectangle;
    7. Edited the path segment that crossed the rectangle to make it nice and wavy;
    8. Used "Selection from path";
    9. Cut.


    ...and lo! I have a wavy-edged bit taken out of the rectangle

    Was that what you wanted?


    Yes, and you make it sound so simple

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    Originally posted by xoggoth View Post
    Never heard of paint.net before. Looks really good.

    PS In future, will anyone posting info about good FREE stuff please do so before I have spent loads of dosh on commercial things that are no better? Ta.
    It is really good

    Never found myself wanting more from it

    Leave a comment:


  • Durbs
    replied
    Originally posted by xoggoth View Post
    Never heard of paint.net before. Looks really good.
    Just had a look round their site and it does indeed look very good. Downloading it now but i'm surprised i've not come across that one before.

    Fireworks is my graphics tool of choice but is silly money for what it is. Tried Gimp a couple of times but detested the interface.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    In Gimp, I did the following:
    1. Created and filled a rectangle;
    2. Selected the Path tool;
    3. Clicked outside the bottom edge of the rectangle to start a path;
    4. Clicked outside the right edge of the rectangle to add another point;
    5. Clicked below and to the right of the rectangle to add another point;
    6. Ctrl-clicked on the start point to close the path, thereby forming a triangle across the corner of the rectangle;
    7. Edited the path segment that crossed the rectangle to make it nice and wavy;
    8. Used "Selection from path";
    9. Cut.


    ...and lo! I have a wavy-edged bit taken out of the rectangle

    Was that what you wanted?

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    replied
    Never heard of paint.net before. Looks really good.

    PS In future, will anyone posting info about good FREE stuff please do so before I have spent loads of dosh on commercial things that are no better? Ta.

    Leave a comment:


  • Weltchy
    replied
    Originally posted by Spacecadet View Post
    use paint.net
    It's free, It works more like photoshop and there are a lot of tutorials around
    Seconded

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    use paint.net
    It's free, It works more like photoshop and there are a lot of tutorials around

    Leave a comment:


  • Moscow Mule
    replied
    Originally posted by suityou01 View Post
    Don't know what "invert your selection" means I'm afraid.

    Imagine drawing a rectangle, then drawing a wavy line across the bottom right hand corner, so that the wavy line intersects the rectangle. Then remove everything to the right of the wavy line, so that the rectangle remains, with a wavy bit nibbled off the bottom right, and fill it with a solid colour.
    I don't use gimp, but this would work in pixelmator which is roughly similar

    1) draw your rectangle
    2) get a new layer
    3) get your "odd shaped selection" tool.
    4) create an odd shaped selection - it will have two straight lines & 1 wavy line. Pixelmator does this automatically if you draw a wavy line at the edge of a document
    5) fill selection with desired colour
    6) fiddle with moving layer created in 2 around until it looks ok (optional)
    7) merge layers.

    I'm not a pro at this, so there might well be an easier way to do that, but it WFM.

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    replied
    Originally posted by Moscow Mule View Post
    If I understand you correctly, entirely possible I don't, you want to invert your selection, copy then paste into a new doc.
    Don't know what "invert your selection" means I'm afraid.

    Imagine drawing a rectangle, then drawing a wavy line across the bottom right hand corner, so that the wavy line intersects the rectangle. Then remove everything to the right of the wavy line, so that the rectangle remains, with a wavy bit nibbled off the bottom right, and fill it with a solid colour.

    Leave a comment:


  • Moscow Mule
    replied
    If I understand you correctly, entirely possible I don't, you want to invert your selection, copy then paste into a new doc.

    Leave a comment:


  • Cliphead
    replied
    Isn't GIMP more of bitmap editor / Photoshop thingie than a vector drawing tool?

    I use Corel Draw if I need to create shapes, curves etc.

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    started a topic Bezier Lines

    Bezier Lines

    Been messing around in GIMP this evening as I want to create a shape.

    Basically a wide and not very tall rectangle, solid colour, a banner if you will.

    Then subtract a bezier curve from it.

    Hard to explain in just text

    I have been getting some alarmingly weird results in GIMP.

    In theory what I can do is draw a rectable selection area, then draw my bezier curve (path tool) over the top of the rectangle area, and before clicking "selection from path" I hold the control key down, which should subtract from from t'other.

    Not quite working for me though as it tries to turn my bezier curve into a polygonal shape and then subtract that from the rectangle with some alarmingly weird results.

    Googling around for hours and cannot find anything on the topic.

    Are there any artistically capable bods on here that can describe to me what it is I am trying to do?
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