![]() Initially used in GIMP to handle colour correction and flattened representations of layers, the GEGL library is now used for all tile management and to build the underlying graph for a project. GIMP 2.10 is a pretty major overhaul of the software’s core architecture, representing the result of six years of development work to port the software to GEGL, its new image-processing engine.Ĭreated in 2000 by developers at Rhythm & Hues, GEGL (GIMP E Graphical Library) was originally used in the studio’s VFX-focused Film GIMP image-editing software, since renamed CinePaint. Major structural changes: 32-bit workflow, multithreading, GPU acceleration ![]() Most of the functionality was previously avaiable in the experimental GIMP 2.9 series of releases, but this is the first time it has been available in a stable build. The release also introduces two complete new transform tools, on-canvas filter previews and gradient editing, new layer blending modes and improved foreground selection. The GIMP team has released GIMP 2.10, a major update to the open-source image-editing software, adding support for HiDPI monitors, 32-bit and linear workflow, and GPU-accelerated image processing. The tool – you can see it in action here – is one of a range of major features added in this landmark stable build of the open-source image-editing tool. The output of GIMP 2.10’s new Warp Transform tool. ![]() Posted by Jim Thacker GIMP team ships GIMP 2.10
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |