- Version: 2.6.11
- Downloads Count: 498,508
- License Type: Free
- Price: Free
- Date Added: Mar 14, 2012
- Operating Systems: Microsoft Windows 7, Microsoft Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows XP
- Requirements: 4GB RAM for processing large images
- File Size: 19.891 MB
- Author: The GIMP Team
For basic image manipulation, GIMP makes it easy to adjust brightness, colors, contrast, crop, etc. GIMP includes a wide selection of built-in filters and effects, like blur, distort, colorize, and transform. Unlike Serif PhotoPlus X5 or Xara Photo & Graphic Designer (both $90 high-end image editors) there are no shortcuts like red eye remover or Cut Out Studio (PhotoPlus X5), which is a shame because I think GIMP would do them well.
Once you get the hang of the layers system in GIMP, creating original
artwork begins and ends with your skill level. GIMP's painting and fine
art filters produce moderately nice results, but it you're really
interested in creating fine art from photographs, try partnering GIMP
with FotoSketcher (free), a basic image editor that excels at this.
GIMP is purely a raster program, but there are also a vast selection of drawing and painting tools included. Unlike Paint.NET,
another free and open-source image editing and painting program, you
don't have to search the internet for the plugins you need: Most will
have already been incorporated into GIMP.
There are little things to dislike about GIMP: When you minimize the
program, for example, the floating tool boxes remain floating in the
middle of your monitor. You can open as many images as you want, but
there's no way to easily locate or keep track of them.
Subtle things about GIMP show it's not being created by someone
following trends, but rather by a group of people who are passionate
about making GIMP better than the trends. GIMP's image open dialog box
is a perfect example of this: the navigation is smooth, and it's really
easy to see where you are and where you need to be. For a Windows user
who's frustrated by the Microsoft trend to make everything as pretty,
overloaded, and confusing (Windows Vista or 7 file navigation, for
example), GIMP is a blast of fresh air.
--Clare Brandt
resource pcworld
Tags
design/multimedia