I can't seem to get it to work, I've downloaded the newest version of GIMP and G'MIC and I get an error that GIMP is using an old plug in format or something.
Llevo muchos años trabajando con Gimp, pero con tus tutoriales he apredido muchas cosas. Descargaré el tutorial y la transcripción y lo haré. Gracias por compartir el tutorial y las imagenes, que son preciosas. Tengo la campanita activada en RU-vid para estar al tanto.
This tool is amazing, as well as many plugins. I don't have any of these so I always take painfully long paths. Like in this case, I would have just copy pasted as new layer the plant and then duplicate the bottom layer of the table and wall, and try to clone or softly erase edges. Anyways, this is a lot less painful.
Hi Michael, thanks for the tutorial. When I try, it doesn't seem to recognise the priority mask. I followed your instructions as per video. Any ideas what to check? EDIT: Like it shows the priority mask and I have the option selected in the seamcarve tool, but it just just stretches the entire background image instead of just the part not covered by the priority mask.
Hi - I ran into the same problem. To get around it, I simply did a series of seamcarve until I go to the size i wanted. Use a percent that is just under the amount that it starts to stretch.
Hi Michael. May I ask a question which is not directly related to the tutorial, but I'm hopeful that comments to recent videos will get your attention more than comments to older ones: I'm always intrigued by the mouse you use, which seems bigger and differently-shaped than the ones I am used to. Is this a special one for photo-editing / graphic design, and if so, would you like to say something about it? You've also talked about customising tablets for GIMP: In your own work, do you use tablets more than mice, or is it entirely dependent on the type of image you are working with. Thanks in advance.
Hi, thank you very much for your tutorials! A few questions: does G'MIC expands the whole picture (except the painted green), in every direction? How does it affect the image quality? Is there lower resolution on evrything but the plant or just in the "extra" portion you created (to the right), or none at all? And finally, this wouldn't be better than interpolating the image, right? (if I just wanted to scale up an image, in every direction) I ask this for prints. Sometimes part of the subject of a print can get behind a frame, so if I scale the whole thing, I'm losing resolutions all over the image. But if G'MIC could create 1 or 2 inches around it, something that will mostly hide behind the frame, and that does not affect the resolution on the rest of the image, that would be just great. If you guys got what I mean and know another solution, I'm all ears.
Awesome!!!! Thanks for posting this!!!!! I've done this in the past, but I haven't used G'Mic for it. This will be EXTREMELY useful the next time I need to do something like this again. :) Thanks!!!
Thankyou for this tutorial! Really helpful. Could you please explain a little about the math you used there. I would like to know about it as to how it works.Thankyou.
tried multiple times on PC. Trying to make a vertical photo horizontal by expanding to left and right. Have tried various iterations, I've gotten the empty space on the right to fill in completely black, I've gotten the masked image stretched out, I've gotten a transparent stretched out area on the right... I don't know what else to do.
I can't get the latest version of GIMP to run on my computer, only the last (2.9?). It should run flawlessly...I have 64GB Ram, plenty of harddrive space, 2 Xeon processors, and a Quadro RTX Graphics card. But it takes up to 5 minutes for it to even try to come up and then it will crash. Any ideas? The previous version, takes a while to come up (about as long as some of my other art programs), and works fine. Would appreciate any suggestions.
I'm wondering the same thing! My family picture needs to switch from being vertical to horizontal. I'm trying to preserve my family and then extend the background in each direction (i.e. left and right)
Hi Mike, This is what I was looking for, but when I went to download Gimmick program I got all kind of alerts, vocal & flashing to call Microsoft. Please advise.
Did you follow my tutorial on how to download and install G'MIC on Windows (link in description)? If you did, what version of GIMP are you using and what version of Windows?
I know this is kind of an old video but I gotta say you did the math in a very roundabout, awkward manner. All you needed to do is divide 1920 by 1309.
Hey, I had this problem a few minutes ago. Check the part where it says "Input/Output" in the "G'MIC" window, for the Seamcarve settings, and where it says "Input layers" change it to "all". And for "Output" I changed it to "new image", like in the video. This worked for me.
@@DaviesMediaDesign Yeah, this problem has come for me on several other websites, so I probably not the website itself. For whatever reason, my internet doesn't get along with random websites (like this one). Any suggestion regarding where I can (hopefully) download the program?
Gmic don't work on MAC and does not come with gimp 2.10.30. i wonder why gimp took out the GMic plugin, plus, Krita has this seemlessly integrated. PS seems to bribe Gimp to remain primitive ( cuz there was a time GImp had a lot of tools that gave PS a good run for its money unfortunately they took them out - resynthesizer, gmic, healing, fx-foundry and even the CONTENT AWARE TOOL PS just imitated and made a good selling point out of. That was a gimp initiation on older versions they took out in recent version.
This is a very bad tutorial. You spent most of the time talking about cropping and dimensions, and didn't get to the point until almost the end. And when you did you require a third-party plugin. You should have said this tutorial requires the plugin at first. And the worst is we have to watch a separate video to install the plugin!
I have shifted from Photoshop to GIMP, Before I had a fair amount of Photoshop experience so it was hard for me to switch but now I'm confident enough and got rid from Adobe.