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  2. GIMP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GIMP

    GIMP 2.6 was used to create nearly all of the art in Lucas the Game, an independent video game by developer Timothy Courtney. Courtney started development of Lucas the Game in early 2014, and the video game was published in July 2015 for PC and Mac. Courtney explains GIMP is a powerful tool, fully capable of large professional projects, such as ...

  3. GIMPshop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GIMPshop

    GIMPshop shared GIMP's feature list, customisability, and availability on multiple platforms, but had a different graphical user interface modeled on that of Photoshop.As a result, many tutorials for past versions of Photoshop could be followed in GIMPshop with little or no modification.

  4. GimPhoto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GimPhoto

    Because the menu layouts are much closer to Photoshop's, adaptation from Photoshop is much quicker than GIMP. [7] Version 24.1 for Windows is with new installer for Windows 8.1 including 7 and new 10. Version 26.1 for Mac OS X 10.6+ is also available. It is based on GIMP 2.6.8 and needs X11. [8]

  5. GTK - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GTK

    GTK (formerly GIMP ToolKit [2] and GTK+ [3]) is a free software cross-platform widget toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces (GUIs). [4] It is licensed under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License, allowing both free and proprietary software to use it. It is one of the most popular toolkits for the Wayland and X11 windowing ...

  6. Seashore (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seashore_(software)

    Seashore is a free and open-source image editor for macOS, similar to Photoshop/GIMP, with a simpler Cocoa user interface. [2] [3] 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, JPEG, JPEG2000, and HEIC and read-only support for BMP, PDF, SVG and GIF.

  7. G'MIC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G'MIC

    G'MIC (GREYC's Magic for Image Computing) is a free and open-source framework for image processing. It defines a script language that allows the creation of complex macros. Originally usable only through a command line interface, it is currently mostly popular as a GIMP plugin, [2] and is also included in Krita.

  8. Free software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_software

    Free software played a significant part in the development of the Internet, the World Wide Web and the infrastructure of dot-com companies. [57] [58] Free software allows users to cooperate in enhancing and refining the programs they use; free software is a pure public good rather than a private good.

  9. CinePaint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CinePaint

    The main reason for this adoption over mainline GIMP was its support for high bit depths (greater than 8-bits per channel) which can be required for film work. [citation needed] The mainline GIMP project later added high bit depths in GIMP 2.9.2, released November 2015. [4] It is free software under the GPL-2.0-or-later.