.. i know. So i try to understand his use-case. He renders something in Blender (where you can IMHO avoid many issues darktable tries to solve (exposure, noise, ...)) and he then want to use darktable to change something what is hard or impossible to change with other tools or in blender itself.
Am 12.06.20 um 12:01 schrieb daniel patin: > Gimp is like a Photoshp, Darktable is like a Lightroom. > > — > Daniel Patin > https://mediators-le-niglo.fr > @leinadfr @mediatorsNiglo > Le 12 juin 2020 à 11:38 +0200, Michael Mosmann <[email protected]>, a > écrit : >> Can you explain why you choose darktable for this and not gimp or >> something like that? >> >> Am 12.06.20 um 05:51 schrieb Shane Simmons: >>> Is there any way to import PNG files (or other formats) with a >>> transparent background, without the program converting the transparent >>> areas to black? This behavior is not at all what I want. I'm trying to >>> import Blender renders with a transparent background, edit them, >>> and then re-export to PNG... but I can't seem to do that without the >>> exported image's background coming out black. I need the transparency >>> intact to do compositing with. >>> >>> -- Shane >>> -- >>> >>> /"Understanding is a three-edged sword." //-- Kosh Naranek/ >>> >>> >>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>> darktable user mailing list to unsubscribe send a mail to >>> [email protected] >> >> ____________________________________________________________________________ >> darktable user mailing list >> to unsubscribe send a mail to >> [email protected] >> > > ____________________________________________________________________________ > darktable user mailing list to unsubscribe send a mail to > [email protected] ____________________________________________________________________________ darktable user mailing list to unsubscribe send a mail to [email protected]
