[Gimp-user] [Offtopic] Design learning

2010-07-16 Thread Bill
There are literally thousands of gimp tutorials out there, many concentrate on
web graphics.

Here's what I'd do.

1. Create your new image using the desired dimensions (make it slightly wider
than you need, you can crop it later)
2. click on the gradient tool. Choose foreground colour white, choose
background colour grey
click and drag the gradient tool from the top of the image to the bottom.
3. Choose green as foreground colour, use the rectangular selection tool to
select a thin line at the top of the image (doesn't matter if you go the edges
of the image) then click EDIT  FILL WITH FG COLOUR
4. Use the same tool to select a second rectangle further down (again it
doesn't matter if your selection goes off the edges), and fill with FG colour
again
5. Then choose white as foreground colour. Click EDIT  STROKE SELECTION -
choose line width of the stroke in pixels, click OK.
6. Now crop your image to size.

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Re: [Gimp-user] [Offtopic] Design learning

2010-07-16 Thread Mike Marchywka









 To: gimp-user@lists.XCF.Berkeley.EDU
 From: for...@gimpusers.com
 Date: Fri, 16 Jul 2010 12:16:15 +0200
 Subject: [Gimp-user] [Offtopic] Design learning

 There are literally thousands of gimp tutorials out there, many concentrate on
 web graphics.

I know I'm hijacking this thread but I've been trying to find the right audience
to ask this question. In the past, web graphics or at least primitive
computer graphics consistented of ASCII characters arranged
in a way which when viewed from a distance created the illusion of 
an image. I was recently browsing through an old disk trying to figure out what
was what and I was using ssh which is text oriented but had no way to figure
out what some images were- if I could just type them out that would have
been a big help even if the result was very crude. Also, there are times when 
you WANT to 
convert an image into a more concise representation ( compression does this)
that captures the perceptually important stuff while tossing out
other detail ( you can imagine issues with image indexing too). 

I guess my question is ,  does anyone know of tools that can convert 
images to ASCII characters, 
say like imagemagick, or does GIMP provide a way to catagorize blocks
of pixels, say based on wavelet coefficients for each block, and convert
an arbitrary image into a smaller block of text, probably limited to
80 character width?


Thanks.





 Here's what I'd do.

 1. Create your new image using the desired dimensions (make it slightly wider
 than you need, you can crop it later)
 2. click on the gradient tool. Choose foreground colour white, choose
 background colour grey
 click and drag the gradient tool from the top of the image to the bottom.
 3. Choose green as foreground colour, use the rectangular selection tool to
 select a thin line at the top of the image (doesn't matter if you go the edges
 of the image) then click EDIT FILL WITH FG COLOUR
 4. Use the same tool to select a second rectangle further down (again it
 doesn't matter if your selection goes off the edges), and fill with FG colour
 again
 5. Then choose white as foreground colour. Click EDIT STROKE SELECTION -
 choose line width of the stroke in pixels, click OK.
 6. Now crop your image to size.

 --
 Bill (via www.gimpusers.com)
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Re: [Gimp-user] [Offtopic] Design learning

2010-07-16 Thread Dotan Cohen
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 14:29, Mike Marchywka marchy...@hotmail.com wrote:
 I guess my question is ,  does anyone know of tools that can convert
 images to ASCII characters,

This was the first hit on a google search for images to ASCII characters:
http://asciiconvert.com/

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http://gibberish.co.il
http://what-is-what.com
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Re: [Gimp-user] [Offtopic] Design learning

2010-07-16 Thread Mike Marchywka








 Date: Fri, 16 Jul 2010 14:45:11 +0300
 Subject: Re: [Gimp-user] [Offtopic] Design learning
 From: dotanco...@gmail.com
 To: marchy...@hotmail.com
 CC: for...@gimpusers.com; gimp-user@lists.xcf.berkeley.edu

 On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 14:29, Mike Marchywka  wrote:
 I guess my question is ,  does anyone know of tools that can convert
 images to ASCII characters,

 This was the first hit on a google search for images to ASCII characters:
 http://asciiconvert.com/

Thanks,  I didn't  bother to look but I guess I will try that.
That link doesn't obviously have the ability to download an opensource  command 
line utility
but I'll see if others are out there. I think there used to be places that
put picture on T shirts or something by doing this, maybe algorithgms
have gotten betteer now with wavelets LOL.




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 http://gibberish.co.il
 http://what-is-what.com
  
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[Gimp-user] [Offtopic] Design learning

2010-07-08 Thread Matias
Sorry for this completely offtopic question.

I'm a systems administrator with programming experience (mostly python 
and C) and I love web applications design/programming and I'm pretty 
good with html, javascript, css, etc... but I have a really weak point 
when it comes to images desing. I mean, I'd love to learn how to do 
images like this:
http://www.freecsstemplates.org/previews/solutions/images/img01.gif

(from the template http://www.freecsstemplates.org/preview/solutions/)

I understand the basics, and I use quite frequently Gimp, but this is 
not like coding, when you code, most of the times it is easy to 
understand what is happenning (except if the code you are reading is 
perl :-P ) and thus, you can learn but I still can't read images I 
see out there, so, I guess there should be any learning path for this 
also or maybe is that just the creative half of my brain is missing.

Would you recommend any book? any website? or some other way to learn to 
do nice 3d looking menus, buttons..etc?

Thanks for your help, and sorry for the offtopic, but I didn't find a 
better place to ask this. (didn't look for a lot also...)


Thanks!

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Re: [Gimp-user] [Offtopic] Design learning

2010-07-08 Thread Deniz Dogan
2010/7/8 Matias matiassu...@gmail.com:
 Sorry for this completely offtopic question.

 I'm a systems administrator with programming experience (mostly python
 and C) and I love web applications design/programming and I'm pretty
 good with html, javascript, css, etc... but I have a really weak point
 when it comes to images desing. I mean, I'd love to learn how to do
 images like this:
 http://www.freecsstemplates.org/previews/solutions/images/img01.gif

 (from the template http://www.freecsstemplates.org/preview/solutions/)

 I understand the basics, and I use quite frequently Gimp, but this is
 not like coding, when you code, most of the times it is easy to
 understand what is happenning (except if the code you are reading is
 perl :-P ) and thus, you can learn but I still can't read images I
 see out there, so, I guess there should be any learning path for this
 also or maybe is that just the creative half of my brain is missing.

 Would you recommend any book? any website? or some other way to learn to
 do nice 3d looking menus, buttons..etc?

 Thanks for your help, and sorry for the offtopic, but I didn't find a
 better place to ask this. (didn't look for a lot also...)


I understand completely what you mean and I have felt the same
way at times. It just takes some practice, but once you get it
it's really simple. (Note that I'm not a GIMP pro by any means.)

The image you linked can e.g. easily be created using the
following steps:

1. On the background layer create a gradient from gray to white.
2. Create a new layer.
3. On the new layer create a completely white box - select
   rectangle and fill with white.
4. Create yet another layer.
5. On the new layer select a smaller rectangle and fill it with a
   gradient which goes from green to lighter green.
6. Create a new layer with the green stuff at the top.

I know that this is not what you were asking for, but I hope this
helped you understand something new. :)

-- 
Deniz Dogan
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