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Marilynx

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Posts posted by Marilynx

  1. Some time ago, I had posted a comp file of a wolf -- black, grey and white. I needed the wolf to be rust and cream.  Someone converted it, and it worked great for my mock-up.

     

    I finally got around to purchasing a full-sized version of the wolf, and I'm trying to make it look like this:

     

    But I don't know how. 

     

    First thing I did was remove the black back drop to the wolf.  Then I cut a copy of the edge of the wolf, split it into layers depending on angle, and fur-blurred it (Effects => Blurs => Furblur). I merged those back together and slid it under the original wolf, and merged down to give a less edge-cropped and more natural effect.

     

    I made a copy of that layer and turned one of them off.

     

    Selected color replacer from the tool bar.

     

    Selected black to be replaced and a rusty color to replace it with and got... a cream wolf with black markings.

     

    No matter what I do, I can't get the black markings to turn rust. The rest of the wolf goes dark and the black remains black.

     

    What am I doing wrong?

     

     

    fotolia_71807090B_Brownwolf.jpg

  2. On 9/26/2018 at 7:53 PM, BoltBait said:

     

    Thanks! Bevel is one of my favorite plugins too.

     

     

    On that thread, click the big blue download button. Unzip the downloaded file. Run the installer.  Carefully check all the boxes for the things you want installed. Then, after agreeing to the license agreement, click the Install button.  When prompted, click "overwrite".

     

    Got it. I like that installer. Much easier than unzipping everything, and then having to find the correct directory to copy them to, and worrying whether I got the right one the next time I fire up PDN.

  3. 5 minutes ago, BoltBait said:

     

    This is a visual anomaly with Paint.NET v4.1.1.  All plugins with standard colorwheels have this issue at the moment. It will be fixed in the next release.

     

    BTW, even though the color swatch shows alpha, it really doesn't have alpha. The plugins work normally.

     

    Except that they don't. 

     

    I have eight layers, each with a hexagon at a slight angle to the layer below it. When I do the Bevel Selection on them, this is what I get. (Yes, I am saving between sequences.)

     

    https://imgur.com/ee3At4x

  4. Heyla,

     

    I was playing with making some jewelry designs, and converting the "paint" to "metal" using Steps 5-12 of Barbieque's jewelry tutorial.

     

    It wasn't coming out.

     

    Then I noticed that when I set the colors in Bevel Selection, they did not look like solid colors -- they were faded out.

     

    I assume I've somehow done something wrong, but I've done this before without issue. This is what I see.

     

    https://imgur.com/a/rDN5Ntq

     

    I'm not sure how to get it back to solid color, which I think would solve my problem.

  5. On 8/25/2018 at 4:10 PM, doughty said:

     

    Hope you don't have to much trouble following it:)

     

    Me too. I was watching some of the other videos. I really wish the videographer had, in the comments, placed a list of the commands, because it can be hard to follow, especially when on a laptop with a smallish screen.

     

    I love watching the videos, though, because if something doesn't look right when I'm trying to do something, it usually means I missed a step.

     

  6. Some time ago, I saw a tutorial on making a chain using Pyrochild's TRAIL plug-in.

     

    I remember that it involved stretching an oval, and then using transparent gradient to "disappear" the over and under bits of the chain links.

     

    I thought I had saved it. 

     

    Can't find it. And can't duplicate it from memory.

     

    Can anyone point me to that tutorial?

     

    Many thanks....

    • Like 1
  7. On 1/2/2018 at 6:51 AM, Eli said:

    I have been waiting to upgrade for several years already and I think I will wait a few more :)  But I am afraid that in 2020 Desktop PCs will be replaced with Laptops and I do not like Laptops. I love a big keyboard, a mouse and a large screen.

     

    I'm using a laptop because it was handy when my last desktop's motherboard died. I have my favorite ergonomic keyboard and touchpad mouse hooked up to it. If I had the room, I'd have rather larger than the current 19" monitor.

  8. On 1/2/2018 at 5:51 AM, AndrewDavid said:

    Hi @Marilynx

    Welcome to the forum

     

    It would take quite a long time to explain the benefits of Win10 through a forum. We are here to discuss Paint.Net. Having said that the best platform to run Paint.Net is on Win10 .

    Having been around since the days of 8088's, I have seen the industry grow leaps and bounds. After years of staying with XP - when I finally upgraded my computer 18 months ago, it too came with WIN10. New hardware requires new software - especially at the operating system level. WiFi I believe is the driving force behind the hardware improvements (of which I never use). Many features of WIN10 can be turned off which results in the absence of these pop up messages I heard about earlier in the forum.

     

    Think of it as "keeping up with the Jones". New hardware breeds new software that breeds new hardware. The vicious cycle of the IT industry. Thankfully Paint.Net provides an excellent platform for graphics manipulations as well as an excellent support resource here in the forum that even Microsoft can't come close to for supporting Win10. 

     

    Memory - graphics - disk space are the benefits of the new computer to mention a few. For me there is no other operating system than Windows due to my collection of windows based software. Your computer should always be based on the software you use most. If it is Windows based - Win10 is the way to go.

     

    Think of Paint.Net in the beginning and look how far it has progressed. Now Paint.Net is even in the Windows store. The future is all Windows.

     

    Well that's my $.02 cents worth. B)

     

    I've actually been kicking around here for about two years. My experience with computers dates back to punch cards. On an IBM 1130. My first home computer was an Osborne One, a C/PM machine. 64K of RAM, two 183K 5.25 floppy discs, and a 52 character B&W CRT screen. 

     

    Yes, we're here to discuss PDN -- and that's the basis of my question. Rick is actually the only person I've encountered who says "Everyone should upgrade to Win 10."  So I was wondering why.

     

    With the exception of a DOS word processor which I keep around to access old files because I keep finding ones I need to access, everything I do is Windows based. The Mac really doesn't have anything which interests me, except Scrivener, and now that there's a Windows version of Scrivener, even that is a non-starter.

     

    I honestly can't speak to how far PDN has come. I've only been using it for two years. 

     

    And then, you say that Win 10 is the only way to go.  I have 16 GB of memory,  250 GB free on the current drive.  A two terabyte solid state drive would be nice (although I haven't come across any larger than 500 GB), but do I actually need one?

  9. 5 hours ago, toe_head2001 said:

    Why not just install things as needed?  That's what I do with a new installation of an operating system.  Surely you don't need everything on day one.

     

    My Windows 7 machine tells me I have 153 programs installed. There's no way I'd ever install all of those in one go. I install something when I need it.

     

    And mine says I have 101, of which 25-30 are ones I need regularly -- the rest have to do with running printers or scanners, or Flash, or Adobe Acrobat... which I again need on a regular basis.

     

    When you've got a project due is NOT the time to be trying to get the scanner to scan, the printer to print, or to be fighting to transfer notes taken on a phone to the main computer. Plus, MS decides something I use regularly isn't necessary (like Card File) and makes it not work under a new version -- and I have to find a substitute and transfer years of data to it.

     

    To use the car analogy, my computer is a means of doing things. I expect it to do what the program says. I am not a mechanic, and I have no interest in tinkering under the hood, even though I am capable of doing so. (Yes, I've edited the register a time or two, but I don't like it.). I simply want to get in the car, stick the key in the ignition, start it, and drive.  There needs to be a compelling reason for me to change vehicles. (Like having an idiot rear-end my perfectly good car and total it, as happened six weeks ago.)

     

     

  10. On 1/2/2018 at 1:52 PM, toe_head2001 said:

    Windows 10 is leaps and bounds better than it was when it was first released 2.5 years ago.  You really have to be nitpicky to find big issues with it now.

    I think at this point, it just comes down to familiarity with Win10 , rather than having to deal with real tangible issues in the operating system.

     

    Well, never had a black screen of death from previous editions of Windows on updates. Yet my co-author has been offline for two weeks because of a failed update which really screwed things up -- and she's not ignorant when it comes to a computer, being an IT person for an international company. Several other people I know had similar debacles.

     

    That's reason enough to be cautious, IMO, if you have a stable system under Win 7, not to go leaping for Win 10.

  11. 3 hours ago, Pixey said:

    :arrow-up: Excellent points @Joshua Lamusga I will be reading this over a few times.

     

    I too loved Windows 7 and was extremely aggravated when having to upgrade to Win 10.  The older I get the less I like change.  However, I've become more used to the change-over and, as time passes, I'm learning to get used to it.  Hopefully you and your husband will find it thus too :D

     

    Yes, I will be reading over that excellent post from Josh Lamusga a few times, as well.

     

    I have known three people in the last couple of weeks who have had an update for Win 10 "black screen of death" their machine.  One person's machine was down for two weeks. That's not something I can afford to have happen, which is another reason for hesitation. 

     

    The other reason, of course, is all the time it takes to set up a new machine. I don't NEED a new machine, as such; this one is only four years old. I do regular critical backups. But I am not happy with the drop in productivity that getting a new machine entails. That's why I was wondering what the reasoning behind "everyone ought to upgrade to Win 10" was.

  12. 22 hours ago, Ego Eram Reputo said:

    I still use XP, Win7 and Win10. They all function in much the same way.  Much like cars. If you can drive Win7 you'll be fine with Win10.

     

    Tell your husband to use the search tool (magnifying glass icon bottom left of the desktop). Windows key + D to get to the desktop.

     

    I would still be using an XP lap top if the video card hadn't died -- there's a piece of software which does not run under Win 7 or 10 which I miss. (Although the fact that a much-loved graphics program ALSO didn't work under Win 7 is what led me to search for something else, and it's how I found PDN, which does soooo much more than my old one.) Heck, if Word 6 could have handled long file names, I'd still be using it, because there were things I could do with it which cannot be done in later versions. 

     

    I'll tell him. Whether he'll remember is another matter. He's a design engineer, used to having an IT department to "do that for him." As an IT department, I'm better than he is, but I'm not a programmer. That, for me, would be a reason for moving to Win 10, if only so I know what the heck he's snarling about when he has a problem -- I can tell him, "Click this, find that, then click the other item." 

     

    What I hate is having to make a list of everything on a current computer, and then find the discs or files for them, and reinstall everything before the new machine works the way the old one did.

  13. On 1/2/2018 at 6:13 AM, IRON67 said:

    Upgrading has two main reasons: being able to use the advantages and possibilities of modern hardware and software and to minimize security risks, that not more being patched on an older system because of the end of the patch support.

    I still using Windows 7 but 2020 I have to change to Windows 10 or whatever will be actual, including an new computer. Because my old PC (now 8 years) still works fine and I don't need new hardware, I can wait a little bit.

     

    Those are valid points -- using modern hardware. The modern software... eh, they keep putting in bells and whistles which I don't need and which I'm not allowed to turn off or get rid of to give ME more space and speed. (Like my phone -- 3 GB of 16 taken up with a bunch of apps and "features" which I have no use for.) I sometimes think OS developers should be obliged to program for "640 K of RAM -- who could ever need more?" before being allowed to work with modern systems. Learn economy of programming, and not unnecessarily use memory and disc space just because they CAN. (One reason, I admit, I like PDN -- it does a bunch of really cool stuff without taking over tons of resources.)

     

    Security, I admit, is always a concern. 

     

     

  14. 6 hours ago, Reptillian said:

     

    I don't get these messages. I changed the start menu with classic start menu and I use Free Launch Bar. To me, it is easier because of the small things such as task view on taskbar, ribbon bar, quick access toolbar, and so on. I know Windows 10 is badly designed in some way like the start menu (which is an abomination). Plus, Windows 10 offers better hardware support for more modern computers. There's also better of things support under Windows 10. There's just no reason for me to switch back to Win 7. If it were up to me, I'd use Linux really, but the main issue that stops me from using it is the lack of applications. At least Paint.NET can be ran under Linux, but it's not quite easy. As a matter of fact, I remember the author of G'MIC tool actually used Paint.NET with plugins to try to mimic effects for his G'MIC tool.

     

    I get that you like Win 10 and don't want to switch back. 

     

    Linux is of interest, but none of the programs I'm interested in run under it. It's basically irrelevant to this discussion.

     

    I don't like the ribbons in things like Word or WordPad.

     

    My husband spent three hours tonight swearing at his Win 10 machine because he can't find the settings the way he did on every other Win machine we've had. (My home computing dates back to an Osborne One with 64K of RAM and TWO 183K 5.25" floppy disc drives, plus a 52 character B&W CRT monitor.)

     

    I admit that better hardware support for modern computers is a very valuable plus.

     

    I also admit that MS's attempt to force Win 10 installations down everyone's throat really didn't impress me. (And I read about too many tragedies with the attempt destroying someone's previously properly running machine.) I'm potentially interested in Win 10, but only as a new installation on a new machine.

     

     

  15. 3 minutes ago, Reptillian said:

    Secure is controversial as it is the most targeted OS for malware because of usage level, but it is definitely stable and well developed. I'm not a fan of Microsoft, but it is what it is. But, that being said, Windows 10 is recommended over Windows 7 now. Development has prioritized for Windows 10, and by all means, it is better than Windows 7 in terms of usability.

     

    I'm wondering why you think Win 10 is easier to use than Win 7. It's cluttered over with all kinds of "Where do we want you to go today"
    garbage and very few ways to customize it to the way I, personally, work, the way I've done with Win 7.

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