@meetdilip
It will come with practice. Gimp is not a 'brain' just a tool. You would not use a hammer to drive a screw in, you use a screwdriver. (or would you)
You are the brain behind Gimp. While I do not condone infringing copyright, I do know that shutterst*ck and the like, trawl for images to slap their watermark on regardless of origin.
A single image, look at it, assess it, use what is required, selection / clone / anything. A watermark comes in many different forms, from a timestamp in a corner, to those several lines of text over an image.
If it was a whole load of images to process, I might spend a little time isolating the elements of the water mark and use some other method. In this case the heal-selection plugin. https://i.imgur.com/Gk9ZIhV.mp4 If I had a bit more time I might have set that up a bit better, such is life. The general idea, remove the outline first, then deal with the rest.
Keep practising.
Quote: I was totally amazed that my known GIMP tools totally fail against such a watermark.
It will come with practice. Gimp is not a 'brain' just a tool. You would not use a hammer to drive a screw in, you use a screwdriver. (or would you)
You are the brain behind Gimp. While I do not condone infringing copyright, I do know that shutterst*ck and the like, trawl for images to slap their watermark on regardless of origin.
A single image, look at it, assess it, use what is required, selection / clone / anything. A watermark comes in many different forms, from a timestamp in a corner, to those several lines of text over an image.
If it was a whole load of images to process, I might spend a little time isolating the elements of the water mark and use some other method. In this case the heal-selection plugin. https://i.imgur.com/Gk9ZIhV.mp4 If I had a bit more time I might have set that up a bit better, such is life. The general idea, remove the outline first, then deal with the rest.
Keep practising.