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Patterns in GIMP

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Patterns in GIMP Uniklaps 22 May 16:01
  Patterns in GIMP Alexandre Prokoudine 22 May 16:21
   Patterns in GIMP Michael Schumacher 22 May 18:05
  Patterns in GIMP scl 22 May 18:03
   Patterns in GIMP Alexandre Prokoudine 22 May 18:11
  Patterns in GIMP Steve Kinney 22 May 19:01
  Patterns in GIMP Ofnuts 22 May 22:06
Uniklaps
2013-05-22 16:01:30 UTC (almost 12 years ago)

Patterns in GIMP

Win 7 64 bit / GIMP 2.8.4

Hi,

are there more patterns (like stripes and fine stripes)

for the bucket fill option available in the tools menue??

If yes, is there a GIMP download link?

Or is it possible (and if how) to make an own pattern

via scanner or by GIMP via paths and lines?

Thanks a lot and have a great day!

Yours Konrad

sorry: first mail wrong address!

Alexandre Prokoudine
2013-05-22 16:21:39 UTC (almost 12 years ago)

Patterns in GIMP

On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 8:01 PM, Uniklaps de> wrote:

Or is it possible (and if how) to make an own pattern via scanner or by GIMP via paths and lines?

Yes. Please use 'Edit / Paste as / New pattern' command to save any image in the clipboard as a pattern.

Alexandre Prokoudine http://libregraphicsworld.org

scl
2013-05-22 18:03:55 UTC (almost 12 years ago)

Patterns in GIMP

On 22.05.13 at 6:01 PM Uniklaps wrote:

are there more patterns (like stripes and fine stripes) for the bucket fill option available in the tools menue??

Yes, GIMP is already shipped with a Stripes pattern and a Fine Stripes pattern.
In the Bucket fill tool choose Fill type=Pattern fill, press the pattern icon and select the desired pattern from the list or grid.

If yes, is there a GIMP download link?

To get additional patterns you can follow these steps: 1. Go to the gimp-data-extras Git repository [1], 2. download and extract the ZIP archive GIMP_DATA_EXTRAS_2_0_2.zip, 3. copy the contents of the folder 'patterns' to your own patterns folder (see Edit/Preferences/Folders/Patterns to find out that location). 4. Finally either open the Patterns dockable dialog and press the Refresh button or restart GIMP.

This archive also contains some brushes.

The same procedure is for Mac OS X users. Debian/Ubuntu/Fedora/Mageia Linux users get get these resources by installing the package gimp-data-extras.

Kind regards,

Sven

[1] https://git.gnome.org/browse/gimp-data-extras

Michael Schumacher
2013-05-22 18:05:23 UTC (almost 12 years ago)

Patterns in GIMP

Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:

On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 8:01 PM, Uniklaps de> wrote:

Or is it possible (and if how) to make an own pattern via scanner or by GIMP via paths and lines?

Yes. Please use 'Edit / Paste as / New pattern' command to save any image in the clipboard as a pattern.

Or add an image file to a patterns directory, many image file formats work for that.

Regards,
Michael
Alexandre Prokoudine
2013-05-22 18:11:18 UTC (almost 12 years ago)

Patterns in GIMP

On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 10:03 PM, scl wrote:

On 22.05.13 at 6:01 PM Uniklaps wrote:

are there more patterns (like stripes and fine stripes) for the bucket fill option available in the tools menue??

Yes, GIMP is already shipped with a Stripes pattern and a Fine Stripes pattern.

And since fine stripes were mentioned, I'd suggest visiting http://subtlepatterns.com/.

GIMP will read PNG images as patterns, if they are dropped to the patterns folder.

Alexandre Prokoudine http://libregraphicsworld.org

Steve Kinney
2013-05-22 19:01:50 UTC (almost 12 years ago)

Patterns in GIMP

On 05/22/2013 12:01 PM, Uniklaps wrote:

Win 7 64 bit / GIMP 2.8.4

Or is it possible (and if how) to make an own pattern

via scanner or by GIMP via paths and lines?

In addition to the resources & techniques already mentioned, here are a some ways to make patterns "seamless."

The quick & dirty method to make an image or doodle into a seamless tile is with the command at Filters > Map > Make Seamless. If the image content you are making into a pattern is random or blurry-looking, this method can give very satisfactory results.

A "better" tool for automagically making an image layer tileable lives at Filters > Map > Resynthesize. Tick the check boxes to make the output vertically and horizontally tileable, run the filter, and voila: The layer is rebuilt as a seamless tile that very greatly resembles the original layer.

(I freaking LOVE the resynthesizer. It is also available via Filters > Enhance > Heal Selection and Filters > Enhance > Heal Transparency.)

The precise, completely manual way to make an image or doodle seamless is to use the command Layer > Transform > Offset > Offest by x/2, y2. This command scrolls the layer 50% vertically and horizontally.

Manually fix the visible "seam" that appears across the horizontal and vertical center of the transformed layer, and it becomes a seamless tile. The Clone, Heal, and Smudge tools are potentially useful here, as is the iWarp gadget in the Filters > Distorts menu. The Heal Selection filter mentioned above may also come in handy. As long as you do not change the edges of the transformed layer, it will remain seamless.

In all of the above cases, you can test your result by repeating the Offset by x/2, y/2 command.

:o)

Steve

Ofnuts
2013-05-22 22:06:52 UTC (almost 12 years ago)

Patterns in GIMP

On 05/22/2013 06:01 PM, Uniklaps wrote:

Win 7 64 bit / GIMP 2.8.4

Hi,

are there more patterns (like stripes and fine stripes)

for the bucket fill option available in the tools menue??

If yes, is there a GIMP download link?

Or is it possible (and if how) to make an own pattern

via scanner or by GIMP via paths and lines?

Thanks a lot and have a great day!

gimp-user-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gimp-user-list

Another very quick way to produce stripes (fine or not) is to use a gradient with a linear or bilinear shape and a triangular or sawtooth repetition pattern. You just drag it on a short distance (you can zoom in to make this easier). Another advantage of this method is that the stripes can easily have any angle.