Thanks Chris, Burnie and Pat for your replies. I'll play with this more and
figure it out
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>There is no routine way to "fill in the blank spaces." You would have
>to pick an
>acceptable fill color and live with the little triangles, or
>crop the image to a rectangle containing only real picture elements.
>
>Or you could apply your painting/drawing skill to fill in the
>triangles.
>
>Your
* rhimbo [08-19-13 18:47]:
> I'm trying to rotate an image. Actually, I figured out how to rotate
> it. But I can't figure out how to fill in the "empty" triangular areas
> that represent the area between the edges of the original image and the
> horizontal and vertical edges of the canvas. I w
On 08/19/2013 03:43 PM, rhimbo wrote:
Hello everyone,
I'm a very novice user so feel free to explain in detail! And I apologize
for my ignorance of the proper terminology in posing my question.
I'm trying to rotate an image. Actually, I figured out how to rotate it. But I
can't figure ou
On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 5:43 PM, rhimbo wrote:
> I would like to fill these spaces so it is not obvious
> that the image was rotated. How can I do this?
>
> What is the standard way to manipulate images in this manner?
Pull out the crop tool ;)
http://docs.gimp.org/en/gimp-tool-crop.html
Chris
Hello everyone,
I'm a very novice user so feel free to explain in detail! And I apologize
for my ignorance of the proper terminology in posing my question.
I'm trying to rotate an image. Actually, I figured out how to rotate it. But I
can't figure out how to fill in the "empty" triangular