A patch for optimizing GIMP 3.0+ for Adobe Photoshop users, including features like:

  • Tool organization to mimic the position of Adobe Photoshop;
  • New Splash Screen;
  • New default settings to maximize space on the canvas;
  • Shortcuts similar to the ones in Photoshop for Windows, following Adobe’s Documentation;
  • New icon and Name from custom .desktop file.

https://github.com/Diolinux/PhotoGIMP/blob/master/screenshots/photogimp_3_-_diolinux.png

Flatpak (Linux)

In order to install the newest version of PhotoGIMP on your Linux operating system using Flatpak, just follow this simple steps:

  • Make sure you already have GIMP installed from Flathub; (for Ubuntu/Mint user just select Flatpak below the install button in the manager)

  • Start and quit GIMP after you installed before you continue!

  • Download the files from this repository or just click here - > https://github.com/Diolinux/PhotoGIMP/releases/download/3.0/PhotoGIMP-linux.zip

  • Extract the content of the zip file on your home folder (.config and .local - they are the important ones) and overwrite the files if needed; (if you can’t see the file click Ctrl+H to see hidden files)

-You’re done, enjoy it! 😄

  • rozlav@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    is this maintained enough ? 9 month since last commit. also I would love to see illustrator/inkscape ui same project ヽ(♡‿♡)ノ

  • yetAnotherUser@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Hey OP, please remove the photogimp[.]com from your post body, as it’s not an official webpage of the project and could lead to something like clueless people installing viruses off of it. Thanks in advance.

    (Also, for those who are Brazillian, or just speak Portuguese for one reason or another, I highly recommend the YouTube channel belonging to the people behind this patch –Diolinux (YT) (website))

  • Ardens@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    Much, if not all of this, you can set up yourself, without a lot of installing things…

    But people really would be better of, getting used to GIMP as it is, because it will cause problems later on, on updates and if the project discontinues and so forth.

    • Hackworth@piefed.ca
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      3 days ago

      Of the 2, I’ve come to prefer Krita. Acly replaces most of Photoshop’s generative tools cleanly and improves upon them with features like pose vectors and live mode.

        • Flamekebab@piefed.social
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          3 days ago

          Yeah, that’s the problem I have - it’s something I end up doing on an awful lot of photos. I need that tool.

          • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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            3 days ago

            At it’s heart, Krita is a drawing program with a few concessions to photo editing/manipulation. Whereas Gimp is a photo editing software with a few concessions to drawing.

            Unless Krita decides to go the full adobe route and try to do both (which I doubt will ever happen), a feature like setting a white point (or any feature that isn’t solely useful for photography but not drawing) will ever be in it.

            People making the comparison as though Gimp and Krita are both trying to do the same thing are utterly exhausting.

        • atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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          3 days ago

          While that is an important distinction. It still needs to be said that Krita is a drawing program like Inkscape and Illustrator not a photo editing program like GIMP or Photoshop.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            3 days ago

            Yeah, that’s kind of a thing; the Adobe suite kind of doesn’t have a raster drawing program, Photoshop gets used for that but Photoshop is meant to be a photo editor.

            A “digital artist” or “digital painter” will want to use Krita, a “graphic artist” designing logos or signage is gonna want Inkscape, and people wanting to lie via photograph want GIMP.

              • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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                2 days ago

                Well, I’ll put it to you this way: If I hire a graphic artist to design a logo for my company, and they turn in a .png they drew in Photoshop, GIMP or Krita, they’re fired. Because I’m going to have my logo on my website, printed on business cards, on key fobs, on the side of work trucks, and painted on the side of buildings. I need a four color variant, a black and white variant and an outline variant, and they all need to work when printed at any scale. Raster art can’t do that. “Hey, can you plasma cut my company logo out of stainless?” “Send over the file.” “…what the fuck is this?”

                Hell just having it in .svg format rather than .ai format is gonna be a problem, because Adobe Illustrator is a proprietary industry standard. But I mean, the rest of society is dying, why shouldn’t graphic arts also have the disease?

      • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 days ago

        Nah, I use krita for everything Ive used photoshop for over the decades. It has a lot of the same exact filters and ui conventions etc of creative suite era photoshop.

  • ☂️-@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    shoutout to diolinux! dude is doing a lot of heavy lifting to help out new linux users over in brazil. and photogimp is quite useful everywhere.

    • yum@lemmy.eco.br
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      3 days ago

      True. I don’t watch him myself, but I enjoy seeing how he’s managing to get more exposure to linux around here

  • TrackinDaKraken@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Thank you. Works well. I’m much happier with the interface I used for over 30 years in Photoshop, it’s helpful to have that emulated somewhat in GIMP.

    I also tracked down how to set the scroll wheel to zoom without the need for the Ctrl key, which was another annoyance. I’ve tried before to discover this, but failed. Maybe I was looking at the official documentation, which could use some work. Anyway, here’s how to get the scroll wheel to zoom without the Ctrl key:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQoz__idQKM

    • SatyrSack@quokk.au
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      3 days ago

      To save anyone from having to watch a video:

      Edit > Preferences > Input Devices > Input Controllers > Main Mouse Wheel

      In this menu, double-click “Scroll Up”, and select view-zoom-in-accel. Then do the same to “Scroll Down” with the value view-zoom-out-accel.

    • ekZepp@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 days ago

      Just did that, thanks👌.

      btw the comand x me was just :

      view-zoom-in

      view-zoom-out

  • arsCynic@piefed.social
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    2 days ago

    Liked, bookmarked, installed. Can finally start using GIMP now.
    On Arch Linux pacman -S gimp will do, run and close, and then overwrite as instructed above. No need for Flatpak.

      • rozodru@pie.andmc.ca
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        3 days ago

        it’s not though. I just tried it and you can’t highlight text and then scroll through fonts. you still need to know specifically what font you want or know all the fonts installed on your system. Unlike photoshop where you can highlight text and then scroll through the fonts you have installed which will change the highlighted text to whatever font on the fly. Gimp still to this day doesn’t do that.

        • InFerNo@lemmy.ml
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          3 days ago

          Not in the popup dialog, but in the text tool properties (on the left under the tools after you select the tool). You can scroll through the fonts there and your selected font will apply to the currently selected text.

          My biggest pet peeve is having to scroll past 5000 versions of Noto font.

  • blady_blah@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Excuse me for being out of the loop, but is there a path towards AI photo manipulation coming for gimp? (Or already here?). Basically doing things like generative fill and other AI editing capabilities?

    (I use affinity photo for my photo editing at the moment, so it’s been awhile since I’ve been paying attention to gimp.)

      • myszka@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        I mean if it’s run locally and we have it just as an option in gimp it kinda becomes good, doesn’t it? I think the problem with AI is that people try to force you to use it where it doesn’t belong and that it compromises your privacy if run on some company’s servers

        • Routhinator@startrek.website
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          Its also trained on stolen data, artists work without their permission. AI training, even for the offline models, uses massive amounts of electricity and water and is currently accelerating climate around the world as well as unaffordability as demand for water and electricity cause prices to skyrocket. At the same time its accellerating the unaffordability of personal computing, including phones, and threatening to remove open PC hardware platforms by removing direct access to affordable DIY hardware.

          On the other side of this, continued use and justification of LLMs existence is enabling the founding of mass surveillance and control systems that will be the foundation for totaltarian states, while at the same time enabling the rich to manipulate and control truth. And because of randomized token tie breaking, anything that comes out of it is only partially correct even when its one of the 30% of the times the reply is partially useful.

          And - on top of all of that, you are nerfing your own skills and brainpower everytime you use it, in addition to having it do something for you that you could be learning yourself, which would have increased your existing skills while teaching you a new one.

          AI is a horrible technology, doesn’t matter where you run it.

          • quick_snail@feddit.nl
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            24 hours ago

            It doesn’t verify the authenticity of all the software that it downloads with cryptography.

            Compared to something like apt, which will refuse to install something if it was maliciously altered, verified with pgp signatures.

            It’s pretty pathetic, but most of these new package managers are a security nightmare

            • moonpiedumplings@programming.dev
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              23 hours ago

              This is not true. Flatpaks from flathub are signed with a gpg key.

              Now admittedly, they use a single release key for all their signing, which is much weaker than the traditional distro’s model of having multiple package maintainers sign off on a release.

              But the packages are signed.

              Edit: snaps are signed in a similar way.

                • moonpiedumplings@programming.dev
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                  11 hours ago

                  From flahubs docs: https://docs.flathub.org/blog/app-safety-layered-approach-source-to-user#reproducibility--auditability

                  The build itself is signed by Flathub’s key, and Flatpak/OSTree verify these signatures when installing and updating apps.

                  This does not seem to be optional or up to the control of each developer or publisher who is using the flathub repos.

                  Of course, unless you mean packages via flatpak in general?

                  Hmmm, this is where my research leads me.

                  https://docs.flatpak.org/en/latest/flatpak-builder.html#signing

                  Though it generally isn’t recommended, it is possible not to use GPG verification. In this case, the --no-gpg-verify option should be used when adding the repository. Note that it is necessary to become root in order to update a repository that does not have GPG verification enabled.

                  Going further, I found a relevant github issue where a user is encountering an issue where flatpak is refusing to install a package that is not signed, and the user is asking for a cli flag to bypass this block.

                  I don’t really see how this is any different from apt refusing to install unsigned packages by default but allowing a command line flag (--allow-unauthenticated) as an escape hatch.

                  To be really pedantic, apt key signing is also optional, it’s just that apt is configured to refuse to install unsigned packages by default. So therefor all major repos sign their packages with GPG keys. Flatpak appears to follow this exact same model.

  • nil@piefed.ca
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    3 days ago

    Vanilla GIMP has superior UX compared to Photoshop imo

    • Krudler@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      I’ll take 10 of whatever you’re smoking because it’s obviously the good shit

    • CmdrShepard49@sh.itjust.works
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      3 days ago

      As someone with no PS experience or other baggage weighing me down, I find the default UI to be insanely unintuitive. Im not even sure what the panels on the right or bottom are for, the left toolbar panel randomly disappears on me occasionally and I can never figure out how to get it back without closing and reopening GIMP. Things like Crop don’t seem to do anything obvious. Painting with the brush doesn’t work unless you first use the selection tool to draw a box around the area you want to use the brush. Etc, etc, etc. Some of this is obviously just because I’m a novice, and I manage to fumble my way through things, but at the same time it could be drastically simplified for simple tasks. It feels like a tool that was built for people who already knew how to use it.

      • Da Oeuf@slrpnk.net
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        3 days ago

        I highly recommend you watch one of the free video courses, from the beginning, on youtube.

        GIMP is a really sophisticated piece of software designed for maximum technical control and flexibility. If you can dedicate a few hours to learning it you can do basically anything, for free, forever. If you only need to do basic stuff it might be worth looking at something else like Tux Paint for example, which is faster to pick up. It also has sound effects and is great fun.

        • gwl@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          2 days ago

          But the point they’re making is that other editors are intuitive, and don’t need a video tutorial

          • Da Oeuf@slrpnk.net
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            2 days ago

            It was a long time ago now but I distinctly remember having to watch videos to learn how to do things in Photoshop.

            IMO Gimp will always get flak about the UI not matching Photoshop, rather than the other way around, for the simple reason that users are always switching in that direction. I haven’t heard of anyone ditching GIMP for Photoshop.

    • morgenman@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      This is just wrong. I love foss and the effort put into gimp, but there are so many little ux things that it gets wrong.

      The big one for me is non destructive resizing of pasted objects. Photoshop puts the little drag handles on them allowing for resizing, the top middle one allows you to rotate, holding the shift key locks proportions etc, all right away after pasting.

      On gimp you can open a menu and specify the height and width, or you can click shift + s, which kind of works like Photoshops but is somehow clunkier & destructive when shrinking.

      I also really miss smart objects and the universal tool options menu (not sure what it’s called but it lives on the top of the canvas on PS and gives you all the relevant options for whatever tool you are using. I’m sure gimp has an equivalent but out of the box I find it much more correct and confusing.

    • ekZepp@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 days ago

      Agreeable, but this patch is useful for people coming from photoshop, especially the shortcuts. The muscle memory is hard to fix 😙

      • supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz
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        3 days ago

        The muscle memory is hard to fix

        Also this is software, we should celebrate and embrace the fact that the same tool can be customized to look and be organized differently to maximally ease users into learning it. This is one of the super powers of software!

      • Hackworth@piefed.ca
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        3 days ago

        Preach. My key bindings followed me from Avid to FCP to Premiere. Still hittin H for RaHzor.

      • nil@piefed.ca
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        3 days ago

        Really? I don’t think Photoshop is any better than GIMP. It’s slow, complicated and adobe cloud.

    • Da Oeuf@slrpnk.net
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      3 days ago

      I agree. I transitioned to GIMP on my own hardware a couple of years ago but still have to use Photoshop once a week for work.

      Panning and zooming - a massive part of graphics UX - is miles better in GIMP for example and makes PS look primitive by comparison.