On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 12:10 PM, Jay Smith wrote:
> Ideas?
Maybe use two backgrounds - each just dark enough to include the
shadow in a reasonable selection (or hide it), one tinted/colored a
warm color and the other a cool color (red and blue?). Then put warm
stamps on the cool bg and vice ver
On 06/13/2009 02:46 PM, Chris Mohler wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 13, 2009 at 1:08 PM, Jay Smith wrote:
> [big snip]
>> So
>>
>> I am hoping for suggestions as to a) how to avoid the color shadow of
>> using a colored background and b) if it cannot be avoided, how to fix it
>> in gimp without a lot of
On Sat, Jun 13, 2009 at 1:08 PM, Jay Smith wrote:
[big snip]
> So
>
> I am hoping for suggestions as to a) how to avoid the color shadow of
> using a colored background and b) if it cannot be avoided, how to fix it
> in gimp without a lot of messing around and/or other color distortion
> proble
Using Gimp 2.6.6 on Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy) Linux. (Working great, NO
crashes as some people complain of.)
The answer to this question is not as straight-forward as it sounds.
Problem:
- Scanning (xsane from within gimp) images of canceled postage stamps.
(Also tried with Photoshop/Windows using va