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Ego Eram Reputo

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Everything posted by Ego Eram Reputo

  1. Look in Effects > Artistic for Stipple. Effects > Stylize for Dots.
  2. Nope. There are some tools to adjust the kerning and place text on a curve/circle/wave, but nothing to place text within a shape with edge justification like your examples. I had a look at the source on the example page. The CSS is creating multiple rectangular selections one line high in order to place and justify the text on a line-by-line basis. You're probably going to have to do something similar + manually to achieve the effect. Have a look at these.. Text+ Text Pro Kerning tool: http://forums.getpaint.net/index.php?/topic/19751-hows-this-for-ui-design-lol/
  3. Welcome to the forum Bethanyjohnsonxx! Can you confirm that you're using the tool with this icon? There is another similar icon - this one is used for making selections and not for drawing rectangles.
  4. Hi lordoni. It's nice to have you here on the forum Try this: 1. Open your first image. 2. Got to Layers > Import from File. 3. Browse to the second image. 4. Click OK. If the first image is larger, the second image will be imported as a new layer and located in the top left of the canvas. The Move tool will be activated automatically. Grab the bottom right control nub and stretch the image out until it fills the canvas. If the second image is larger the reverse will happen (first image will be small and top-left located). You will need to select this (hint: activate first image layer, Magic Wand the transparent surround and invert the selection with CTRL + I). Activate the move tool (press M) and again drag out the image to match.
  5. Let's hope they didn't have a dog.... or kids
  6. I can usually fix internal forum links. Just make a post in the tutorial thread to let us know the links are not working. <moved to Paint.NET Discussion & Questions>
  7. This plugin is about as close as you're going to get composition tool. As has been pointed out, digital images have a rectangular aspect. Your only way to alter this is to rotate the image or alter the image edges within a larger transparent canvas. The aspect will still be rectangular, it will just appear different. Of course you will need to save the image in a format which supports transparency - like PNG.
  8. When it's ready. Rick will let us know a date. Be patient.
  9. "Mastering Paint.NET 3.5.10" had a long gestation and was a difficult birth Originally I wanted to update the book when v4.0 came out. However, as the release date for v4.0 approaches my circumstances have not changed sufficiently to allow me to spend the vast amount of time required to update the book. It IS on my wish list. But then, so is space travel If it had been a best seller I might have been more motivated to invest a slice of my life in the project.
  10. Consider the lighting source Use this direction to drag out a white-to-light grey radial gradient on the white floor. It should darken the corners a little - giving a flat block of white a bit of realism. Feel free to upload the photo so we can see what you're trying to achieve.
  11. April Update No less than seven new toys for you this month, including one new filetype and a contribution from a new author. Welcome @Legorol! Measure Object - @Martin Osieka. Measures an object in a selection within the active layer. Measurements returned are: area, location, width, height, diagonal, and angles of the bounding rectangle. PostScript FileType - @Martin Osieka. Imports PostScript (*.PS) , Encapsulated PostScript (*.EPS), and Adobe Illustrator (*.AI) files and renders them as bitmap layers in Paint.NET. Requires Ghostscript to be installed. TR's DrumSkin - @TechnoRobbo. Re-maps rectangular images to circular. TR's HDR-ish - @TechnoRobbo. Mimics HDR style images by smoothing out the transitions between light and dark, making a dull picture less dull TR's PanoPDN Panoramic Viewer - @TechnoRobbo. Converts equirectangular images (think: spherical images or spherical projections) into a texture map and renders them in direct3d. TR's SphereCuber - @TechnoRobbo. Converts a Spherical View image into a cube-map of six files representing Up, Down, Left, Right, Front & Back views. Unblend - @Legorol. Removes a chosen color from the image and replaces it with transparency. In other words, it performs the reverse of a normal blend operation with the chosen color.
  12. You made a nice job of that alexxaab. I hope we see more from you!
  13. ...but possible. Check out the last three entries in the Galleria for a demo of what our esteemed users of Paint.NET can do with a space theme. Link: http://forums.getpaint.net/index.php?/topic/8665-galleria-the-paintnet-art-gallery/?p=406630
  14. Sorry about that. Link fixed. It was an out-of-date list
  15. Paint.NET can handle quite a few images at a time. You would probably have been fine to do this one simultaneously (unless you have a small amount of memory and/or lots of other images open).
  16. 4.0 will soon(ish) become the required version. We haven't discussed the issue, but I'm betting users will be STRONGLY ENCOURAGED to write tutorials from a 4.0 perspective when 4.0 becomes public. Personally, I'd write tutorials for 4.0 and highlight the variations 3.5.11 requires.
  17. To remove simple black or white backgrounds you can use AlphaSpace.
  18. You can find the plugin here....Custom Brushes
  19. This is showing up directly in the Effects menu. I would recommend placing it in one of the submenus - for they are legion and good for keeping stuff organized How about Effects > Color? Or even Adjustments? BTW: Codelab supports an information header in your *.cs files, so it's possible to provide a bit of info about the plugin. This is used in v4.0 to populate the tooltip when you hover over the plugin in the menu. The header looks like this: // Submenu: Color // Name: Unblend // Author: Legorol // URL: http://www.getpaint.net/redirect/plugins.html Your code here...... Impressive description of the plugin function in your *.cs file. Nice touch!
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