12-26-2020, 10:18 AM
Are your card images also gif files, these will be indexed colour which will cause problems, changed or missing colours when an overlay is added. You need to work on RGB mode for these batch processes. Your overlay can be converted to a png retaining transparency, the cards themselves png or jpeg.
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Edit: Horrible thought: Is the gif an animation? Still possible using sg-combine-bg.scm but a lot more work for a whole deck of cards.
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Two methods both using 'extra' scripts / plugins.
1. Open the cards as layers File -> Open as Layers Add the overlay image again `Open as layers' and move to the bottom of the layer stack. Now run a script sg-combine-bg.scm to add the bottom layer to all the rest. Next you have to export the layers back to separate images. Various scripts for this, a very versatile one attached, export-layers-plus.scm Both those attached, unzip and put in your Gimp user profile C:\Users\"yourname"\AppData\Roaming\GIMP\2.10\scripts
Not a tutorial, not even a comprehensive demo but limited to one minute, so quick https://i.imgur.com/DKh6Eck.mp4
2. Using the BIMP plugin. There is a Windows installer see: https://alessandrofrancesconi.it/projects/bimp/ Method (1) gets a bit cumbersome for lots of layers. BIMP works on files already on disk. I have used it for 1000+ at a time. There is an option for adding a watermark, which is your image and exporting to a new file, preserving the originals. Another quick animation. https://i.imgur.com/GqiQChQ.mp4
There are other scripts and plugins, bound to be other suggestions.
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Edit: Horrible thought: Is the gif an animation? Still possible using sg-combine-bg.scm but a lot more work for a whole deck of cards.
--------
Two methods both using 'extra' scripts / plugins.
1. Open the cards as layers File -> Open as Layers Add the overlay image again `Open as layers' and move to the bottom of the layer stack. Now run a script sg-combine-bg.scm to add the bottom layer to all the rest. Next you have to export the layers back to separate images. Various scripts for this, a very versatile one attached, export-layers-plus.scm Both those attached, unzip and put in your Gimp user profile C:\Users\"yourname"\AppData\Roaming\GIMP\2.10\scripts
Not a tutorial, not even a comprehensive demo but limited to one minute, so quick https://i.imgur.com/DKh6Eck.mp4
2. Using the BIMP plugin. There is a Windows installer see: https://alessandrofrancesconi.it/projects/bimp/ Method (1) gets a bit cumbersome for lots of layers. BIMP works on files already on disk. I have used it for 1000+ at a time. There is an option for adding a watermark, which is your image and exporting to a new file, preserving the originals. Another quick animation. https://i.imgur.com/GqiQChQ.mp4
There are other scripts and plugins, bound to be other suggestions.