11-20-2018, 01:07 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-20-2018, 01:35 PM by rich2005.
Edit Reason: typo
)
Yes but it is not fully developed and no good for large images ( > 2000x2000 pix)
Using Windows? Easiest way is open up the Gimp launcher and add after the ...gimp-2.10.exe" add (a space) --show-playground. Apply that and start Gimp.
In Edit -> Preferences there is now an entry Playground select that and enable N-Point Deformation Tool
screenshot of that: https://i.imgur.com/AIEOjbJ.jpg
Restart Gimp and there is a new icon in the toolbox. Choose that, set some values, click in the canvas, click on a node and drag. Works best if there is transparency, otherwise the whole canvas becomes a grid.
screenshots: https://i.imgur.com/gI04qhT.jpg
edit: Your screenshot is from Ad*be Illustrator - a vector application - so the equivalent in Inkscape is a lattice deformation. https://i.imgur.com/klGDhfU.jpg
Using Windows? Easiest way is open up the Gimp launcher and add after the ...gimp-2.10.exe" add (a space) --show-playground. Apply that and start Gimp.
In Edit -> Preferences there is now an entry Playground select that and enable N-Point Deformation Tool
screenshot of that: https://i.imgur.com/AIEOjbJ.jpg
Restart Gimp and there is a new icon in the toolbox. Choose that, set some values, click in the canvas, click on a node and drag. Works best if there is transparency, otherwise the whole canvas becomes a grid.
screenshots: https://i.imgur.com/gI04qhT.jpg
edit: Your screenshot is from Ad*be Illustrator - a vector application - so the equivalent in Inkscape is a lattice deformation. https://i.imgur.com/klGDhfU.jpg