![]() The original tutorial can be found here (dead link). Playing around with the spacing options in the brush selection dialog, the color or using one of the animated brushes you can get very interesting results. ![]() Using a fuzzy brush and selecting a blue color here is the result for the selection made above. When all the options are selected you can finally click on OK. If you select Stroke Using a Paint Tool, you will be able to use the brush that you have selected. You will get a dialog allowing you to set many options for stroking your selection, including dashed lines and other fancy features. When all the options are selected you can click on Edit -> Stroke. Choose also a color and you can play with the spacing option for the brush. Step 3 ¶Īfter you have the selection, choose a brush from the brush selection dialog. Use the selection tools to create a selection with the desired shape. When using the tools, holding shift at the beggining of the selection process will add the selection to what is already selected, while holding the control key will substract from it. There are several ways to make a selection, including all the tools in red shown above and select by color as explained on Selecting and removing one color. Step 1 ¶īefore doing that however we need to make a selection with the shape we want. To give the rectangle an outline, set its Stroke property to a Brush -derived object. To paint the inside of the rectangle, set its Fill property to a Brush -derived object. This option can be accesed on the image menu (right button click on the image), by going to Edit -> Stroke Selection. To draw a rectangle, create a Rectangle object and sets its WidthRequest and HeightRequest properties. The solution is to use the selection stroking capabilities of GIMP. However this doesn’t mean you can’t paint them, in fact there are some interesting options regarding this subject when it comes to GIMP. Since GIMP is an image manipulation program and not a painting program it doesn’t include tools to draw shapes like squares and circles. I would like to try to figure that out if you give me more about where it is.Text and images Copyright (C) 2002 Francisco Bustamante Hempe and may not be used without permission of the author. ![]() I don't understand when you wrote, " under "Color" you can also set the line width". (I tried the one Steve put up above and, although big and bold, it works well.) I can (try!) to make them available (DropBox?) if you want. Once motivated to look in my notes I remembered I have a section on my drive where I save music tracks, sound effects and even a folder for arrows, boxes and other graphics. Use this calculator if you know 2 values for the rectangle, including 1 side length, along with area, perimeter or diagonals and you can calculate the other 3 rectangle variables. Once on the video line above the primary footage, you can select the file move, stretch and manipulate. The trick was remembering how.Īll that is necessary is to put the graphic on a line above your primary video. ![]() I had forgotten how easy it is in Premiere Elements. It did motivate me to revisit my notes and files. I didn't install it so can't comment on the ease of adding arrows, boxes and circles. Thanks for the reference to AVS Video Editor. ![]()
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