Pixen is an open-source raster graphics editor created by the Open Sword group. It is designed to create and edit pixel art. It runs on Mac OS X. The latest version is Pixen 3.
Pixen utilizes a basic interface similar to that of Adobe Photoshop. While common tools are included in Pixen, such as the pencil, eraser, and fill tool, Pixen also uses a unique left/right tool system. This system enables the user to assign a different tool to the left and right mouse buttons. This can be used effectively when drawing and erasing. It also features several color palettes, as well as integration with Mac OS X's color options.
Unlike most basic bitmap-based applications like Microsoft Paint, Pixen has a layer system that will let you organize parts of an image, name them, or hide them. Again, some of its tools can be compared to Photoshop. The magic wand tool is one that is particularly notable.
Showing posts with label software. Show all posts
Showing posts with label software. Show all posts
Tux Paint
Tux Paint is an open source bitmap graphics editor (a program for creating and processing raster graphics) geared towards young children. The project was started in 2002 by Bill Kendrick who continues to maintain and improve it, with help from numerous volunteers. It is licensed under the GNU General Public License, and seen by many as a free software alternative to a similar commercial educational software product, Kid pix.
Seashore
Seashore is an image editor for Mac OS X, which was influenced by the GIMP and written using the Cocoa API. It is released under the GNU General Public License. Seashore uses GIMP's native file format, XCF, and has support for a handful of other graphics file formats, including full support for TIFF, PNG, and JPEG, and read-only support for BMP, PDF and GIF. Seashore offers a smaller number of features in comparison with GIMP, including layers and alpha channel support, gradients and transparency effects, anti-aliased brushes, tablet support and plug-in filters.
Seashore is currently at version 0.1.9 and is considered to be in Beta stages. It lacks many of the features that GIMP has, but Seashore's purpose is to become an easy-to-use Free Software graphics editor that runs natively on Mac OS X. Currently there is a working version of GIMP for Mac OS X, Gimp.app. Gimp.app has many features that Seashore does not have, but it requires a version of X11 to run. Seashore is written using the native Mac toolkit, Cocoa.
Seashore is currently at version 0.1.9 and is considered to be in Beta stages. It lacks many of the features that GIMP has, but Seashore's purpose is to become an easy-to-use Free Software graphics editor that runs natively on Mac OS X. Currently there is a working version of GIMP for Mac OS X, Gimp.app. Gimp.app has many features that Seashore does not have, but it requires a version of X11 to run. Seashore is written using the native Mac toolkit, Cocoa.
Paint.NET
Paint.NET is an open source, raster graphics editing program for Windows, developed on the .NET Framework. Originally created as a Washington State University student project, Paint.NET has evolved from a simple replacement for the Microsoft Paint program included with Windows into a powerful editor with support for layers, blending, transparency, and plugins.
Paint.NET is primarily programmed in the C# programming language, with small amounts of C++ used for installation and shell-integration related functionality. Its native image format, .PDN, is a compressed representation of the application's internal object format, which preserves layering and other information. Released under the MIT License, Paint.NET is open source software.
Paint.NET is primarily programmed in the C# programming language, with small amounts of C++ used for installation and shell-integration related functionality. Its native image format, .PDN, is a compressed representation of the application's internal object format, which preserves layering and other information. Released under the MIT License, Paint.NET is open source software.
mtPaint
mtPaint is a graphic editing program geared towards creating indexed palette images and pixel art. It is aimed to be simple and easy to use.
mtpaint is designed for use on the GNU/Linux and Microsoft Windows computer operating systems, and uses the GTK+ toolkit (version 1 or 2). It was originally created in 2004 and developed by Mark Tyler, but since 2006 it has been maintained by Dmitry Groshev. Released under the terms of the GNU General Public License, mtPaint is free software.
mtpaint is designed for use on the GNU/Linux and Microsoft Windows computer operating systems, and uses the GTK+ toolkit (version 1 or 2). It was originally created in 2004 and developed by Mark Tyler, but since 2006 it has been maintained by Dmitry Groshev. Released under the terms of the GNU General Public License, mtPaint is free software.
Krita
Krita is the bitmap graphics editor software included with the KDE based KOffice suite. Designed to be both a painting application and a photo editor, Krita is free software and distributed under GNU General Public License. It was released for the first time as a part of KOffice version 1.4.0, on June 21, 2005. Before any public release, it was called KImageShop and then later Krayon, but legal matters motivated a change from these names.
Krita's design emphasizes creating new images as opposed to manipulating existing photographs. It been influenced to an extent by Corel Painter. As of 2006, many plugins written over the years for these other applications were not yet available for Krita.
Notable features found in the 1.5 release include CMYK, L*a*b and many more colorspaces, with bit depths from 8 to 32 bits per channel. Work is ongoing on support for natural painting tools that imitate painting or drawing with pencils, or paint brushes with ink or oil paints, even simulating the drying of the paint. The development version of Krita is the first publicly available paint program with proper color mixing.
Krita 1.5 also features complete integration with KOffice allowing (among other things) embedding of KWord text components into images. The 1.6 release added support for handling perspective in drawings, including perspective transformation, perspective grid and perspective clone, layer masks, some enhanced tools like a new magnetic selection tool and a bezier curves tool, many new filters and a PDF import tool.
Now the work is being focused on KDE 4, for which natural painting tools are planned, but also better KOffice integration, better performance and being more feature-complete.
Krita's design emphasizes creating new images as opposed to manipulating existing photographs. It been influenced to an extent by Corel Painter. As of 2006, many plugins written over the years for these other applications were not yet available for Krita.
Notable features found in the 1.5 release include CMYK, L*a*b and many more colorspaces, with bit depths from 8 to 32 bits per channel. Work is ongoing on support for natural painting tools that imitate painting or drawing with pencils, or paint brushes with ink or oil paints, even simulating the drying of the paint. The development version of Krita is the first publicly available paint program with proper color mixing.
Krita 1.5 also features complete integration with KOffice allowing (among other things) embedding of KWord text components into images. The 1.6 release added support for handling perspective in drawings, including perspective transformation, perspective grid and perspective clone, layer masks, some enhanced tools like a new magnetic selection tool and a bezier curves tool, many new filters and a PDF import tool.
Now the work is being focused on KDE 4, for which natural painting tools are planned, but also better KOffice integration, better performance and being more feature-complete.
KolourPaint
KolourPaint is a free, easy-to-use raster graphics editor for the K Desktop Environment.
It aims to be conceptually simple to understand, providing a level of functionality targeted towards the average user. KolourPaint is designed for daily tasks such as:
* Painting - drawing diagrams and "finger painting"
* Image Manipulation - editing screenshots and photos; applying effects
* Icon Editing - drawing clipart and logos with transparency
In version 3.3 of KDE, KolourPaint replaced KPaint as the standard simple painting application. It is shipped as part of the kdegraphics package.
KolourPaint can also run in desktop environments other than KDE, such as Xfce and GNOME, as well as window managers like Fluxbox. The prerequisite packages can be installed automatically, and Kolourpaint only needs a small portion of KDE to run.
It aims to be conceptually simple to understand, providing a level of functionality targeted towards the average user. KolourPaint is designed for daily tasks such as:
* Painting - drawing diagrams and "finger painting"
* Image Manipulation - editing screenshots and photos; applying effects
* Icon Editing - drawing clipart and logos with transparency
In version 3.3 of KDE, KolourPaint replaced KPaint as the standard simple painting application. It is shipped as part of the kdegraphics package.
KolourPaint can also run in desktop environments other than KDE, such as Xfce and GNOME, as well as window managers like Fluxbox. The prerequisite packages can be installed automatically, and Kolourpaint only needs a small portion of KDE to run.
GIMPshop
GIMPshop is a modification of the free/open source graphics program GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP), intended to replicate the feel of Adobe Photoshop. Its primary purpose is to make users of Photoshop feel comfortable using GIMP. Or, according to the developer:
"My original purpose for GIMPshop was to make the Gimp accessible to the many Adobe Photoshop users out there. I hope I’ve done that. And maybe along the way, I can convert a Photoshop pirate into a Gimp user."
It shares GIMP's feature list, customisability, and availability on multiple platforms, while addressing some common criticisms regarding the program's interface: GIMPshop modifies the menu structure to more closely resemble Photoshop and adjusts the program's terminology to match Adobe's. In the Windows version, GIMPshop uses a plugin called 'Deweirdifyer' to combine the application's numerous windows in a similar manner to the MDI system used by most Windows graphics packages. Since March 2006, it supports Photoshop plugins, through a host plugin that can run on Microsoft Windows or Linux, pspi. All of GIMP's own plugins (filters, brushes, etc.) remain available.
Due to the GIMP interface changes found in GIMPshop, many tutorials for the popular Photoshop can, without modification, be followed in GIMPshop, and others may be adapted for GIMPshop users with minimal effort.
GIMPshop was created by Next New Networks' (formerly Attack of the Show's) Scott Moschella. It was originally developed for Mac OS X, and required X11 to run on that OS. The Mac OS X version is a Universal Binary. GIMPshop has also been ported to Windows, Linux and Solaris. GIMPshop for Windows is still under development. The only change to the normal GIMP, other than the menu layout and Photoshop naming conventions, is that it adds a background window to the user interface. It also uses an old version of GIMP, 2.2.11, instead of the current 2.2.17.
"My original purpose for GIMPshop was to make the Gimp accessible to the many Adobe Photoshop users out there. I hope I’ve done that. And maybe along the way, I can convert a Photoshop pirate into a Gimp user."
It shares GIMP's feature list, customisability, and availability on multiple platforms, while addressing some common criticisms regarding the program's interface: GIMPshop modifies the menu structure to more closely resemble Photoshop and adjusts the program's terminology to match Adobe's. In the Windows version, GIMPshop uses a plugin called 'Deweirdifyer' to combine the application's numerous windows in a similar manner to the MDI system used by most Windows graphics packages. Since March 2006, it supports Photoshop plugins, through a host plugin that can run on Microsoft Windows or Linux, pspi. All of GIMP's own plugins (filters, brushes, etc.) remain available.
Due to the GIMP interface changes found in GIMPshop, many tutorials for the popular Photoshop can, without modification, be followed in GIMPshop, and others may be adapted for GIMPshop users with minimal effort.
GIMPshop was created by Next New Networks' (formerly Attack of the Show's) Scott Moschella. It was originally developed for Mac OS X, and required X11 to run on that OS. The Mac OS X version is a Universal Binary. GIMPshop has also been ported to Windows, Linux and Solaris. GIMPshop for Windows is still under development. The only change to the normal GIMP, other than the menu layout and Photoshop naming conventions, is that it adds a background window to the user interface. It also uses an old version of GIMP, 2.2.11, instead of the current 2.2.17.
GIMP
The GNU Image Manipulation Program, or GIMP, is a raster graphics editor application with some support for vector graphics.
GIMP is used to process digital graphics and photographs. Typical uses include creating graphics and logos, resizing and cropping photos, altering colors, combining multiple images, removing unwanted image features, and converting between different image formats. GIMP can also be used to create basic animated images in GIF format. It is often used as a free software replacement for Adobe Photoshop, the most widely used bitmap editor in the printing and graphics industries; however, it is not designed to be a Photoshop clone. The project's mascot is a coyote named Wilber.
The project was started in 1995 by Spencer Kimball and Peter Mattis and is now maintained by a group of volunteers. GIMP is free software available under the GNU General Public License.
GIMP is used to process digital graphics and photographs. Typical uses include creating graphics and logos, resizing and cropping photos, altering colors, combining multiple images, removing unwanted image features, and converting between different image formats. GIMP can also be used to create basic animated images in GIF format. It is often used as a free software replacement for Adobe Photoshop, the most widely used bitmap editor in the printing and graphics industries; however, it is not designed to be a Photoshop clone. The project's mascot is a coyote named Wilber.
The project was started in 1995 by Spencer Kimball and Peter Mattis and is now maintained by a group of volunteers. GIMP is free software available under the GNU General Public License.
CinePaint
CinePaint is a computer program to paint on and retouch bitmap frames of movies. It is a fork of version 1.0.4 of the GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP). It is likely the most successful open source tool in feature motion picture work today. It is free software under the GNU General Public License.
Under its old name Film Gimp, CinePaint has so far been used for films such as Scooby-Doo, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, The Last Samurai and Stuart Little.
Features that set CinePaint apart from its photo-editing predecessor are the frame manager, the possibility to do onion skinning, and to work with 16-bit and floating point pixels for HDR. CinePaint supports a 16-bit colour managed workflow for photographers and printers, including CIE*Lab and CMYK editing. It supports the Cineon, DPX, and OpenEXR image file formats. HDR creation from bracketed exposures is easy.
It is available for Linux, BSD, UNIX-like OSes, Mac OS X, and SGI IRIX. Currently support for Windows is broken.
Glasgow, a complete new code architecture for CinePaint, will make a new Windows version possible and is currently under production. The Glasgow effort is FLTK based.
Under its old name Film Gimp, CinePaint has so far been used for films such as Scooby-Doo, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, The Last Samurai and Stuart Little.
Features that set CinePaint apart from its photo-editing predecessor are the frame manager, the possibility to do onion skinning, and to work with 16-bit and floating point pixels for HDR. CinePaint supports a 16-bit colour managed workflow for photographers and printers, including CIE*Lab and CMYK editing. It supports the Cineon, DPX, and OpenEXR image file formats. HDR creation from bracketed exposures is easy.
It is available for Linux, BSD, UNIX-like OSes, Mac OS X, and SGI IRIX. Currently support for Windows is broken.
Glasgow, a complete new code architecture for CinePaint, will make a new Windows version possible and is currently under production. The Glasgow effort is FLTK based.
XnView
XnView is a multi-platform software used for viewing, converting, organising and manipulating graphic & video files. It is free of charge for non-commercial usage and easy to use. Since it contains plenty of functions found in paid image viewers and supports many image file formats which even ACDSee, a very powerful image organizer does not support, it is quite popular among Internet users.
XnView is multi-lingual, it supports English, French, German, Spanish, Basque, Italian, Danish, Norwegian, Greek, Estonian, Croatian, Slovak, Russian, Ukrainian, Hebrew, Arabic, Simplified and Traditional Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Vietnamese, etc. The toolbar buttons can be modified to a certain extent, or be replaced by altering skins.
XnView can show IPTC/EXIF/XMP metadata, and write IPTC metadata (but can not do batch writing of IPTC metadata, and this is the feature some XnView users have been longing for).
Also, XnView has been able to support more and more file formats (mainly image file formats). Until now, it can read more than 400 image file formats, some audio and video file formats, and write 75 image file formats. A JPEG/PNG/TIFF file embeded with an ICC profile is supported by XnView as well.
XnView can search files that have the same filename or data, and can search for similar graphics as well.
In addition, The display of the histogram of a picture is possible (IrfanView does not have this function). And within a few mouse clicks, scripts can be created to convert, manipulate and rename a batch of images in one go.
Not yet common among imaging software is lossless (without new encoding) turning, flipping and cropping of JPEG files. Several image editing tools are included, for instance color and size manipulation, several filters and effects (full version even includes Harry's Filters 3.0). Creation of advanced slideshows is possible as well. Furthermore, it can upload images to an FTP site or Imageshack, burn images to a CD or DVD (Nero Burning ROM required) with a few clicks (full version only).
XnView is multi-lingual, it supports English, French, German, Spanish, Basque, Italian, Danish, Norwegian, Greek, Estonian, Croatian, Slovak, Russian, Ukrainian, Hebrew, Arabic, Simplified and Traditional Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Vietnamese, etc. The toolbar buttons can be modified to a certain extent, or be replaced by altering skins.
XnView can show IPTC/EXIF/XMP metadata, and write IPTC metadata (but can not do batch writing of IPTC metadata, and this is the feature some XnView users have been longing for).
Also, XnView has been able to support more and more file formats (mainly image file formats). Until now, it can read more than 400 image file formats, some audio and video file formats, and write 75 image file formats. A JPEG/PNG/TIFF file embeded with an ICC profile is supported by XnView as well.
XnView can search files that have the same filename or data, and can search for similar graphics as well.
In addition, The display of the histogram of a picture is possible (IrfanView does not have this function). And within a few mouse clicks, scripts can be created to convert, manipulate and rename a batch of images in one go.
Not yet common among imaging software is lossless (without new encoding) turning, flipping and cropping of JPEG files. Several image editing tools are included, for instance color and size manipulation, several filters and effects (full version even includes Harry's Filters 3.0). Creation of advanced slideshows is possible as well. Furthermore, it can upload images to an FTP site or Imageshack, burn images to a CD or DVD (Nero Burning ROM required) with a few clicks (full version only).
Pixia
Pixia is a freeware bitmap graphics editor program for Windows, created by Isao Maruoka. It was originally designed for the anime/manga community but has also been used in other branches of art.
Besides the primary Japanese interface, it is also available in English, French, Italian, Spanish, Hungarian, Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional, Polish, Korean and German. The program supports multiple layers, transparency effects, standard file formats and a number of rgb file formats including psd. The main file extension used by this program is .pxa.
Besides the primary Japanese interface, it is also available in English, French, Italian, Spanish, Hungarian, Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional, Polish, Korean and German. The program supports multiple layers, transparency effects, standard file formats and a number of rgb file formats including psd. The main file extension used by this program is .pxa.
Picasa
Picasa is a computer application for organizing and editing digital photos. In July 2004, Google acquired Picasa from Idealab and began offering Picasa for free download. There is native support for Windows XP and Windows Vista, as well as a beta Linux version, available through Google Labs. There is also a Mac iPhoto plugin or a standalone program for uploading photos available for OS X 10.4 and later.
IrfanView
IrfanView is a freeware image viewer for Microsoft Windows that can view, edit, and convert image files and play video/audio formats. It does not have extensive image creation and painting capabilities like Adobe Photoshop or GNU's GIMP. Rather, IrfanView is designed to be a lightweight viewer/player which is noted for its speed, ease of use, and ability to handle a wide variety of graphic file formats.
The program is named for its creator, Irfan Skiljan of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and is pronounced /iːr.fæn.vjuː/ . IrfanView works under all modern versions of Microsoft Windows (i.e. Windows 95 to Vista; Microsoft tested version 3.98, which was on the official Vista software list). It supports numerous file formats including: image formats such as BMP, GIF, JPEG, PNG, TIFF, non-image media files such as Flash, (Ogg)Vorbis, MPEG, MP3, and text files.
After version 3.92, the installer could choose to also install an eBay toolbar in order to support the developer. In version 3.92, adding the toolbar was selected at installation by default, and the program was criticized by some as containing spyware. The option was not selected in version 3.97, and was replaced with an option to install Google Desktop Search from 3.98.
The program is named for its creator, Irfan Skiljan of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and is pronounced /iːr.fæn.vjuː/ . IrfanView works under all modern versions of Microsoft Windows (i.e. Windows 95 to Vista; Microsoft tested version 3.98, which was on the official Vista software list). It supports numerous file formats including: image formats such as BMP, GIF, JPEG, PNG, TIFF, non-image media files such as Flash, (Ogg)Vorbis, MPEG, MP3, and text files.
After version 3.92, the installer could choose to also install an eBay toolbar in order to support the developer. In version 3.92, adding the toolbar was selected at installation by default, and the program was criticized by some as containing spyware. The option was not selected in version 3.97, and was replaced with an option to install Google Desktop Search from 3.98.
Brush Strokes Image Editor
Brush Strokes Image Editor 1.01 is a bitmap graphics editor made by Paul Bird for the Microsoft Windows operating system. The current free version has a memory leak making the editing of large images impossible.
* GIF animations
* filters (e.g. blur, sharpen, negative, outline, posterize)
* transformations (e.g. rotation, perspective, twist)
* colour adjustment
* selections (e.g. magic wand, colour selections)
* paint tools (e.g. pen, brush, clone tool)
* pattern and image fills
* transparency
* feathering
* crop
The "Filters & Lenses" tool box has a noise reduction function that retains edges within the canvas. It does a surprisingly good job of eliminating speckles and smudging in JPEG images. Any of the filters can be applied repeatedly for two seconds by clicking on the last button in the tool box. The first row of buttons in the tool box apply the current pen color as a semi-transparent gradient superimposed on the canvas:
* Top to bottom
* Right to left
* Bottom to top
* Left to right
The "Distortions" tool box performs horizontal & vertical flips and rotations. It also contains the "stretch or twist" and "perspective" tools, which unfortunately don't apply anti-aliasing (in the free version, at least). However, the "Text" tool in the "Pens & Brushes" toolbox does apply anti-aliasing (if enabled via the Control Panel for Windows), and is easy and convenient to use.
* GIF animations
* filters (e.g. blur, sharpen, negative, outline, posterize)
* transformations (e.g. rotation, perspective, twist)
* colour adjustment
* selections (e.g. magic wand, colour selections)
* paint tools (e.g. pen, brush, clone tool)
* pattern and image fills
* transparency
* feathering
* crop
The "Filters & Lenses" tool box has a noise reduction function that retains edges within the canvas. It does a surprisingly good job of eliminating speckles and smudging in JPEG images. Any of the filters can be applied repeatedly for two seconds by clicking on the last button in the tool box. The first row of buttons in the tool box apply the current pen color as a semi-transparent gradient superimposed on the canvas:
* Top to bottom
* Right to left
* Bottom to top
* Left to right
The "Distortions" tool box performs horizontal & vertical flips and rotations. It also contains the "stretch or twist" and "perspective" tools, which unfortunately don't apply anti-aliasing (in the free version, at least). However, the "Text" tool in the "Pens & Brushes" toolbox does apply anti-aliasing (if enabled via the Control Panel for Windows), and is easy and convenient to use.
ArtRage
ArtRage is a bitmap graphics editor created by Ambient Design Ltd to simulate painting and drawing.
ArtRage, currently in version 2, is a painting package designed to take advantage of the unique form of the Tablet PC to create a natural environment for producing art on your computer. By providing realistic tools such as oil paints and pencils, and simulating the real world dynamics of those media, ArtRage allows any user to play around with paint without the expense and mess of its real world counterpart. By providing Tracing tools, ArtRage lets any level of user produce paintings based on photographs or other existing images.
ArtRage comes in two editions: A free version and a commercial Pro version with additional features.
ArtRage, currently in version 2, is a painting package designed to take advantage of the unique form of the Tablet PC to create a natural environment for producing art on your computer. By providing realistic tools such as oil paints and pencils, and simulating the real world dynamics of those media, ArtRage allows any user to play around with paint without the expense and mess of its real world counterpart. By providing Tracing tools, ArtRage lets any level of user produce paintings based on photographs or other existing images.
ArtRage comes in two editions: A free version and a commercial Pro version with additional features.
Adobe Photoshop Album
Adobe Photoshop Album is a software application by Adobe Systems designed to import, organize and edit digital photos, and allows quick and easy searching and sharing of entire photo collections. It is often compared to Apple Computer's iPhoto and Google's Picasa. It was initially released on February 18, 2003. The last version was Photoshop Album 2.0.1, which was released on March 18, 2004. Adobe has discontinued the full version of Photoshop Album and instead recommends Adobe Photoshop Elements. However, a freeware version is now provided, Photoshop Album Starter Edition 3.2 (Windows-only).
One notable feature of Album is its pervasive use of a tag-based as opposed to a folder-based organization of pictures. This allows photos to be organized into multiple cross-cutting categories. For instance, a photo could be tagged with "Mom" and "Florence Vacation" to indicate that your mother appears in the photo and that it was taken over a vacation in Florence. Selecting either tag would gather all photos also tagged with "Mom", or all photos tagged with "Florence". This can be less convenient in a folder-based scheme, but allows for more dynamic organizing of photos. Tags themselves can be grouped hierarchically and separated into different categories and sub-categories.
One notable feature of Album is its pervasive use of a tag-based as opposed to a folder-based organization of pictures. This allows photos to be organized into multiple cross-cutting categories. For instance, a photo could be tagged with "Mom" and "Florence Vacation" to indicate that your mother appears in the photo and that it was taken over a vacation in Florence. Selecting either tag would gather all photos also tagged with "Mom", or all photos tagged with "Florence". This can be less convenient in a folder-based scheme, but allows for more dynamic organizing of photos. Tags themselves can be grouped hierarchically and separated into different categories and sub-categories.
PixBuilder Photo Editor
PixBuilder Photo Editor, sold by WinSoft Graphics Software, is graphics software for photo editing and images manipulation which runs under Windows 98 and later versions of Microsoft Windows.
PixBuilder Photo Editor was first sold in June 9, 2005.
PixBuilder Photo Editor was first sold in June 9, 2005.
WinImages
Black Belt Systems WinImages is a bitmap graphics editor and special effects applicator that supports both automation of editing tasks and animation of effects. WinImages is a MDI application which runs under Windows 95 and later versions of Microsoft Windows.
WinImages began life in 1985 as a product called ImageMaster. It was ported to Windows in 1989, which is when the name was changed to WinImages.
As of December 2004, WinImages is at version 7.5.
WinImages began life in 1985 as a product called ImageMaster. It was ported to Windows in 1989, which is when the name was changed to WinImages.
As of December 2004, WinImages is at version 7.5.
Ultimate Paint
Ultimate Paint (UPaint) is a bitmap graphics editor for the Windows platform modelled after Electronic Arts' Deluxe Paint. Most functionality of Deluxe Paint has been implemented while there are also some additions such as built-in filters / effects and support for Adobe plug-ins.
UPaint was originally created as an inhouse tool at Megalux, manufacturer of video boards and scoreboards. The current developer is J-T-L Development.
UPaint is no substitute for a full-featured editor like Adobe Photoshop or GIMP, but as a small, lightweight program (the ram footprint is not much more than that of MS Paint), UPaint is better for some quick tasks.
UPaint was originally created as an inhouse tool at Megalux, manufacturer of video boards and scoreboards. The current developer is J-T-L Development.
UPaint is no substitute for a full-featured editor like Adobe Photoshop or GIMP, but as a small, lightweight program (the ram footprint is not much more than that of MS Paint), UPaint is better for some quick tasks.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)