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Similar function?

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Similar function? Jeffry Killen 30 Oct 05:36
  Similar function? xemoth@gmx.com 30 Oct 05:55
  Similar function? Carol Spears 30 Oct 13:29
Jeffry Killen
2017-10-30 05:36:44 UTC (over 6 years ago)

Similar function?

Hello;

It is not clear to me as I dig into the manual for Gimp, if there is a tool that does what the magic wand tool does in Photoshop.

I have used the magic wand tool to select a solid background (single specific colored pixels such as white) in an image. Then inverting the selection so only the image part is selected. Then I can copy the selected image part and paste it into a layer in another file.

In this way the image part now has a transparent background and can be combined with other image elements in the layer stack.

I have done this often to create collage layouts.

The way I get an image with a solid background is to use the pen tool in Photoshop and drag paths around the part of the image I want to carve out. Then I create a selection from the path. Once the selection is made I can copy the selected part of the image into a separate file with a solid background. ( I now have a separate file that can be reverted to if further image processing is unacceptable).

I am aware that there are other ways to isolate parts of an image but they seem to waste much of the time saved by having to clean them up and/or use trial and error to get exactly the right selection area.

Thank you for time and attention; Jeff K

xemoth@gmx.com
2017-10-30 05:55:08 UTC (over 6 years ago)

Similar function?

Try the Fuzzy Select Tool, aka the Magic Wand

https://docs.gimp.org/2.8/en/gimp-tool-fuzzy-select.html

Owen


> Sent: Monday, October 30, 2017 at 4:36 PM
> From: "Jeffry Killen" 
> To: gimp-user-list@gnome.org
> Subject: [Gimp-user] Similar function?
>
> Hello;
> 
> It is not clear to me as I dig into the manual for Gimp, if there
> is a tool that does what the magic wand tool does in Photoshop.
> 
> I have used the magic wand tool to select a solid background
> (single specific colored pixels such as white) in an image.
> Then inverting the selection so only the image part is selected.
> Then I can copy the selected image part and paste it into a layer
> in another file.
> 
> In this way the image part now has a transparent background
> and can be combined with other image elements in the layer stack.
> 
> I have done this often to create collage layouts.
> 
> The way I get an image with a solid background is to use the
> pen tool in Photoshop and drag paths around the part of the
> image I want to carve out. Then I create a selection from the
> path. Once the selection is made I can copy the selected part
> of the image into a separate file with a solid background.
> ( I now have a separate file that can be reverted to if further
> image processing is unacceptable). 
> 
> I am aware that there are other ways to isolate parts of an image
> but they seem to waste much of the time saved by having to clean
> them up and/or use trial and error to get exactly the right selection area.
> 
> Thank you for time and attention;
> Jeff K
> _______________________________________________
> gimp-user-list mailing list
> List address:    gimp-user-list@gnome.org
> List membership: https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gimp-user-list
> List archives:   https://mail.gnome.org/archives/gimp-user-list
>
Carol Spears
2017-10-30 13:29:16 UTC (over 6 years ago)

Similar function?

On Mon, Oct 30, 2017 at 1:36 AM, Jeffry Killen wrote:

Hello;

It is not clear to me as I dig into the manual for Gimp, if there is a tool that does what the magic wand tool does in Photoshop.

I have used the magic wand tool to select a solid background (single specific colored pixels such as white) in an image. Then inverting the selection so only the image part is selected. Then I can copy the selected image part and paste it into a layer in another file.

In this way the image part now has a transparent background and can be combined with other image elements in the layer stack.

Foreground select works about like this, iirc.

carol