In another follow-up to
Máirín's tutorial about
Grungy Brushes, I showed an
alternate way to create those using
Inkscape only. But is kind of weird to create brushes with
Inkscape only to use them with
GIMP so I wrote a few tricks about
using brushes with Inkscape.
The article is a bit heavy in images, with a few
large screenshots, so I will not post it directly in my
blog to waste people's bandwidth, but instead in a
static page. Go read it if you are interested.
good work ...
ReplyDeleteyour blog is wonderful ...
i am love inkscape ...
look my gallary ... in devaintart
www.anasemad.deviantart.com
thanks for your lessons ...
i was found your blog by search for inkscape ... look that
http://technorati.com/search/inkscape
your blog in first search Results .. wonderful .....
keep it up ....
i wait your next lesson .....
thanks for the tips nicu!
ReplyDeletei did no know about the stamping abilty of inkscape. i always just duplicated or copy/pasted a path. haha, i look like a fool now....
and as always the rest of your tut was super useful.
thanks for the tip mate!
Thanks mates, I am glad you liked it.
ReplyDeleteMerci Nicu ... keep up the good work :)
ReplyDeleteCred ca ai singurul blog din lista mea de unde pot invata ceva.
hii nicu,
ReplyDeleteit's a nice blog, and helps a lot.
thanks for the tutorial
hi, I will be reading more of your blog as I've always liked inkscape.
ReplyDeleteNow that I have a drawing tablet I am disappointed by the brushes though! Much less configurable for pressure responsiveness than gimp.
"Brushes in a vector graphics application (like Inkscape) are not as powerful as brushes in a raster graphics application (like GIMP)" - Doesn't seem like it has to be that way! Well I mean, there are some inherent limitations but ...