10-28-2024, 10:52 AM
Stephen, you are a very difficult person to advise, however in the spirit of the forum.
It is broken on your installation, nothing I can do about it.
You get a washed-out image and Auto Input levels does nothing ? Then it is the original negative and you really need to post a representative image. Did not work last time, if they are large file size, more than 500 k then use a file sharing service.
From your other post, "Hundreds of negatives to process" and Ubuntu 24.04 / Gimp 2.10.36
You probably do not have any python support in that version. Do you have an up-to-date G'mic plugin installed ?
The attached script-fu neg-tweak.scm (unzip - put in scripts folder)uses a couple of the gmic filters and might (or might-not) make a slight improvement.
It registers in Filters -> Custom Try it on a sample image and see if you get a result.
The problem is consistency, you can use BIMP with this but probably each image needs individual consideration.
(10-28-2024, 05:43 AM)Stephen Liu Wrote: My problem here is unable to resize the popup window of "Negative Darkroom". I can't see the bottom tabs on the popup window.
It is broken on your installation, nothing I can do about it.
Quote:It seems no action here after selecting; - Colours / Levels / Auto Input Levels
Please refers to the screenshot attached here.
You get a washed-out image and Auto Input levels does nothing ? Then it is the original negative and you really need to post a representative image. Did not work last time, if they are large file size, more than 500 k then use a file sharing service.
From your other post, "Hundreds of negatives to process" and Ubuntu 24.04 / Gimp 2.10.36
You probably do not have any python support in that version. Do you have an up-to-date G'mic plugin installed ?
The attached script-fu neg-tweak.scm (unzip - put in scripts folder)uses a couple of the gmic filters and might (or might-not) make a slight improvement.
It registers in Filters -> Custom Try it on a sample image and see if you get a result.
The problem is consistency, you can use BIMP with this but probably each image needs individual consideration.