12-12-2019, 10:20 AM
(This post was last modified: 12-12-2019, 10:29 AM by rich2005.
Edit Reason: typo
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It is subtle because it is so small. Very probably originally a vector image rendered at a that small size or a larger image scaled down and degraded.
However, AFAIK not possible in one go using Gimp.
Easy enough to get a gradient fill.
Put the texture in with a brush, You can make your own, start with a greyscale image, white is transparent, black solid foreground colour, grey's FG with transparency. Better to make larger and size down in tool options than small.
Example:
Export as something.gbr put in your brushes folder C:\Users\"yourname"\AppData\Roaming\GIMP\2.10\brushes Use it as a stamp and dab onto the image.
Attached the gbr file for you to play with.
Quote:You have to zoom in to really see it because it's subtle.
It is subtle because it is so small. Very probably originally a vector image rendered at a that small size or a larger image scaled down and degraded.
However, AFAIK not possible in one go using Gimp.
Easy enough to get a gradient fill.
Put the texture in with a brush, You can make your own, start with a greyscale image, white is transparent, black solid foreground colour, grey's FG with transparency. Better to make larger and size down in tool options than small.
Example:
Export as something.gbr put in your brushes folder C:\Users\"yourname"\AppData\Roaming\GIMP\2.10\brushes Use it as a stamp and dab onto the image.
Attached the gbr file for you to play with.