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Suggestion: Transparency for the Paintbrush tool


Jenna

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Hi,

 

First of all my sincere congrats with Paint.Net!!! Super program! Thanks for making such a neat cool graphic tool!

I hope you don't mind making a suggestion: a transparency setting in the Paintbrush tool.

I really miss this option. The Hardness setting works fine, but it does not fade the paintbrush hence becoming softer. Transparency setting/slider would.

 

My best greetings and thank you,

Jenna

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Jenna,

 

Here layers will serve you well.  Draw on another layer and change the transparency for the entire layer.  Or, as splatcat noted, change the opacity in the Colors window.  :-)

 

The Doctor: There was a goblin, or a trickster, or a warrior... A nameless, terrible thing, soaked in the blood of a billion galaxies. The most feared being in all the cosmos. And nothing could stop it, or hold it, or reason with it. One day it would just drop out of the sky and tear down your world.
Amy: But how did it end up in there?
The Doctor: You know fairy tales. A good wizard tricked it.
River Song: I hate good wizards in fairy tales; they always turn out to be him.

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Many thanks for the tips! I'm a bit of a beginner in Paint.Net. I worked with an ancient program called Micrographics Picture Publisher for years. Unfortunately it doesn't work in Windows 7 or 8 and they don't update it anymore. So I need to get used to new a paint program hence new methods :-(

I tried several paint programs and I like Paint.net most of all!

Anyway, I tried the suggestions and it works (many thanks!), but one thing is a bit cumbersome; the opacity always returns to 255 when changing color (or using the color picker) and the Color window does not remain "more" (the options you get when pressing 'more') after you close Paint.net. It does not "remember" the 'more' setting.

 

Thanks!

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Jenna the size of the Colors Window is a trade off of functionality vs the canvas size.  By default the window is closed - allowing more space for the canvas.  Unfortunately you cannot get the larger size to persist between Paint.NET sessions.

 

RE: Opacity:  You can set up a default palette with customized RGB and Alpha (opacity) settings.  See how some palette colors have a checkered effect?  That's an indicator that these have partial opacity.

 

The color picker tool should pick up the opacity of the pixel you click on.

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Just to enhance off of what EER is talking about, there are two icons in the Colors Window, by using these icons you can make your own color palette, but remember to save the palette or the new colors won't be there next time. You can make your color palette out of many different colors and various transparencies, including Alpha 0. However, you are limited to only seeing the first two rows unless you click "More", but adjusting to the need of toggling between "More" and "less" starts to feel like second nature the more you get used to your new work flow habits.
 
MakeYourOwnColorPalettes2_zps5aa55e6d.jp
 
If you are interested, you can find further instructions here : http://forums.getpaint.net/index.php?/topic/1708-how-to-install-pluginsgeneral-plugin-troubleshooting-thread/?p=235263
And you can have more fun with custom palettes here : http://forums.getpaint.net/index.php?/topic/2947-color-palettes-go-here/

:)

Edited by Cc4FuzzyHuggles
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It is a nice features those custom palettes! Thanks for the help everybody. :)

 

However, It will not make editing quicker when you are trying to smudge (by combining Hardness and opacity) the faults of a drawing away.

For example, you have a face and you are trying to erase all the faults away making it a perfect face. When you do that using the colorpicker and the paintbrush tool it will take many actions switching between colorpicker and opacity setting (because the transparancy is not a fixed variable). I easily do 50 color picks for a simple edit hence 50 times changing the opacity value manually. This is also a reason why I can not use a custom color palette because one never knows which colors I will need.

I hope I explained it a bit better.

 

Many thanks!!

Edited by Jenna
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  • 1 year later...

Sorry to necro this thread, but I've ran into the same workflow issue as Jenna, had to switch to a more heavyweight app in the end.

 

Given that paint.net already has brush hardness, it should be trivial to add opacity (scale hardness function) I think, which would make the paint tools more powerful.

 

I wouldn't even mind to contribute (code-wise) if there was a way. :)

 

 

Here a quick and dirty mock-up of what I mean:

iR0F8dY.jpg

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1. No necroposting, no matter the reason.  Since you apologized, you know it's wrong.  It's been over a year.  Don't do it.  Start a new thread instead.

 

2. Come on, man.  Never tell a programmer something should be "trivial" - you don't know the codebase or program architecture, you have no idea.  For all you know, it would take a complete rewrite of the program and a precise alignment of Mars and Jupiter to make it happen.

 

3. If you want to contribute, write a plugin.  It wouldn't be able to interact directly with the canvas, but building a "sub-canvas" that then writes to the main canvas is not only possible, but has been done before.

 

For all of these reasons (but mostly just #1), I'm locking this thread.  Don't take it personally.  :-)

  • Upvote 1

 

The Doctor: There was a goblin, or a trickster, or a warrior... A nameless, terrible thing, soaked in the blood of a billion galaxies. The most feared being in all the cosmos. And nothing could stop it, or hold it, or reason with it. One day it would just drop out of the sky and tear down your world.
Amy: But how did it end up in there?
The Doctor: You know fairy tales. A good wizard tricked it.
River Song: I hate good wizards in fairy tales; they always turn out to be him.

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