Anonymous ID: c3bf70 Sept. 15, 2020, 11:53 a.m. No.10658370   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8408

Camo anon wanted camo, and how to use it in gimp.

 

First some gimp help. Camo will be next post.

 

Very easy to open a file in gimp by dragging the file from your file manager into the gimp workspace. (Or you can go through menus and dialogs…)

Very easy to drag a second file on top of the first as a new layer, simply by dragging it onto the existing open image.

(You can go through menus & stuff but dragging is so much faster & easier.)

Arrange the layers how you like. Don't like the arrangement? Drag the bottom layer to be the top layer in the layers dialog. Or don't.

May have to resize one or the other to match. "Scale Image" or "Scale Layer". I put these on a hotkey since I use them continuously.

If the camo overlay is on top, play around with changing its opacity (use the opacity slider on the layers menu).

Also near that slider you will find the blend mode pick list. Might try a few different blend modes to see what looks good on your base image.

Then File, Export As, give it a filename.

Or even faster, if you only plan to use it one time, just Edit / Copy Visible and there it is in your paste buffer ready to paste to QR or Twat or FB or…

 

That's how I'd do it.

Anonymous ID: c3bf70 Sept. 15, 2020, 11:57 a.m. No.10658408   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8460

>>10658370

If the colored camo doesn't work for you, change it to grayscale. Colors | Desaturate.

If the color is OK but too strong, try reducing the opacity with the Opacity slider.

If the pattern is too small, Scale the camo layer larger, then crop off the part you don't want.

Anonymous ID: c3bf70 Sept. 15, 2020, 12:03 p.m. No.10658460   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10658408

Copied camo 3.

Dragged Meme onto gimp workspace.

Pasted camo 3 as new layer so it's a layer on top of the meme.

Then Edit, Copy Visible. (This way, you don't have to save a file or crop or resize, just save the part of the image that is visible. camo 3 is bigger than the meme, and the parts that are bigger are not visible unless you enlarge the gimp canvas to fit the largest layer, which I did not do.)

 

Result is fine with no additional tinkering.

This worked because camo 3 is partially transparent.