![]() On that page I show about ten examples of what these “Script-Fu” scripts/filters can do. If you’re wondering what these scripts do, see the end of my article titled A catalog of 130+ Gimp filters/effects. To get to this folder with the Mac Finder you may have to go to the Finder, then click the “Go” menu, then “Go to Folder,” then paste this path into it: ~/Library/Application Support/Gimp. Film Gimp is a frame-by-frame retouching tool used by motion picture studios as an alternative tool to Adobe Photoshop. ![]() On my MacOS system, this folder is /Users/Al/Library/Application Support/GIMP/2.8/scripts. An anonymous reader writes 'Film Gimp, the most popular open source tool in feature motion picture work, has released its first Macintosh version.Film Gimp is now available for Mac OS X, Linux, and SGI Irix. Then restart Gimp (which I recommend), or run Filters > Script-Fu > Refresh Scripts to get those new scripts working.Go to Preferences > Folders > Scripts to figure out where to put the scripts.So I downloaded those scripts, and then had to figure out how to make them work in Gimp on MacOS. I couldn’t get the Gimp “Reflection” filter to work (on Gimp 2.8), so after a little digging around I found that the website has kept some of the Gimp scripts - called Script-Fu scripts - up to date. Contact me at (al) at valleyprogramming (dot) com for details. Want to work together? Your business can now hire me (Alvin Alexander) for small Scala and Flutter side projects.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |