632
submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by kde@floss.social to c/kde@lemmy.kde.social

You heard #Adobe. Deep down you knew this was coming. Now all your art are belong to them. Time to move on to better things...

Kreative Suite
* Krita is your new design/painting app
* Kdenlive will give you video-editing powers
* glaxnimate adds 2D vector animations to you videos
* digiKam organises your collection images

https://kde.org/for/creators/
Also:
* Inkscape - create sophisticated vector-graphic designs
* Scribus - layout like a pro
* GIMP - need we say more
* Blender - ditto

@kde@lemmy.kde.social

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[-] Nachorella@lemmy.sdf.org 6 points 5 months ago

I hate adobe and have been actively trying to switch away from them for a while. I work in game development, though, and for some reason no one has made it as easy to directly modify the alpha channel of a texture. It's something I have to do a lot and is probably the one thing keeping me from using krita or affinity photo.

@Nachorella
Gimp can do that if I recall correctly.
@kde

[-] Nachorella@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 5 months ago

I'll try it again, looks like it's come some way since I last checked.

[-] Rainne@mastodon.social -1 points 5 months ago

@Nachorella @minecraftchest1 I do that a lot in GIMP: right-click a layer, "add layer mask", and it makes a secondary grayscale layer that works like a second alpha channel, that you can directly draw on, apply filters to, etc. A lot of my stuff has solid-color layers with all the work done in those layer masks.

[-] Nachorella@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 5 months ago

I might be misunderstanding but that sounds different to a specific alpha channel. Sometimes in game art you'll store extra information in the alpha channel of a texture. Or even pack four different grayscale images into the rgba channels of a single texture. Is it easy to do stuff like that?

[-] Rainne@mastodon.social 0 points 5 months ago

@Nachorella You can right-click a layer and Apply Layer Mask to bake it into the main layer's alpha channel (or Merge Visible Layers to combine all layers and their masks).

I think you *can* work with individual R/G/B channels in GIMP, or at least add a Channels tab where they're visible separately and you can add arbitrary channels; but I don't have experience drawing on the channels independently like that. But my gut says it may be doable.

this post was submitted on 07 Jun 2024
632 points (97.9% liked)

KDE

5253 readers
78 users here now

KDE is an international technology team creating user-friendly free and open source software for desktop and portable computing. KDE’s software runs on GNU/Linux, BSD and other operating systems, including Windows.

Plasma 6 Bugs

If you encounter a bug, proceed to https://bugs.kde.org, check whether it has been reported.

If it hasn't, report it yourself.

PLEASE THINK CAREFULLY BEFORE POSTING HERE.

Developers do not look for reports on social media, so they will not see it and all it does is clutter up the feed.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS