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199 lines
12 KiB
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199 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4350
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Title: HPR4350: GIMP: More Photo Fixes
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4350/hpr4350.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 23:29:10
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4,350 for Friday the 4th of April 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, Gimp, More Photo Fixes.
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It is part of a series Gimp.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, a few more fixes to some of the common problems in photos.
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Hello, this is Ahukah, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode.
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And I'm going to, at this point, conclude for the time being, and perhaps forever, my
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series on Gimp.
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Now, previously, I did a few changes to photos, how to fix some of the problems.
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And I'm going to do a little bit more in this episode.
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And you're going to see some similarities here.
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But I'm going to start with dark photos, okay?
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Because, you know, sometimes photos just aren't exposed the way you want them to be.
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It could happen because you took a photo at night, or you're in an area with low light
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levels.
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I've got some photos from the Mirror Woods in California.
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They were taken in a daytime, but it looks like midnight, just because there was so much
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little light there.
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Now, can things like that be fixed?
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Yes, to some degree.
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What you have to bear in mind is you cannot create information if it was not captured
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in the first place.
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Now, I have a few photos that I took in Heidelberg, Germany, that had this problem on a sunny
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day, because the sky was so bright that the camera adjusted to the sky, thus making the
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city scene too dark.
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So how do I handle this problem?
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Well, first, open the photo and Gimp.
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All right?
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Almost goes without saying.
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Go to the colors menu and select levels.
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Now this will open a pop-up window to adjust color levels.
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This becomes a trial and error process, but you may be amazed at what you can do with
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just a few simple tweaks.
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In fact, this whole episode is going to be about trial and error fixes.
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It's not just push a button and you're done.
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So with the adjust color levels open, you should see that the setting for channel will
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be value.
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Leave it there for the moment.
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That means you will be adjusting all three color channels equally, which means it is
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just the overall darkness and brightness that you're dealing with.
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Now underneath that is the input levels setting, and there is a histogram.
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And underneath it is a long box with triangles.
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These are sliders, and there are three of them.
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Though one may be half hidden if it is all the way to one side.
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Therefore, black, gray, and white, or instead of gray, you could say mid-tone, those are
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two valid ways of looking at it.
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Now note that there is a check box in the lower right of the pop-up for split view.
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This will split the screen down the middle, so you can see the original side by side with
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your modified version.
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I recommend using this.
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You will see it on the other pop-ups we use as well.
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Start with the middle slider and move it to the left.
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You should see the picture start to brighten.
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Depending on the original photo, this may be all you need to do.
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As I said, it is trial and error, and what matters most is if you like the picture you
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are getting.
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But you can try to modify it a bit more with the other two sliders.
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Then if you wish, you can go back to the value setting and select each of the primary
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colors of red, green, and blue, and adjust them as well.
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Click OK if you like what you have, which will close the adjust color levels pop-up.
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Let's go to the colors menu and select exposure.
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This will open another pop-up window.
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In this pop-up window, you can adjust the exposure and the black level.
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Make any adjustments you need to make here.
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Remember to use split view.
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When you like what we have, what you have, click OK, closing the pop-up.
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For more tweaking, you can go to the color menu and select color temperature.
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This term is something that comes from physics and is somewhat technical and rather counterintuitive,
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at least the way I think about it.
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We tend to think of reds and oranges as warm colors and blues and whites as cool colors,
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but in color temperature, it's just the opposite.
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You don't really need to get into all of this if you just want to think of this as another
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possible tweak to your photo.
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Adjust the sliders for original temperature and intended temperature until you like the
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result and click OK to accept this and close the pop-up window.
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One last adjustment can be made by going to the color menu and selecting curves.
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This pop-up has a graph with a diagonal line running up from left to right, but you can
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click on the line and drag it to create a smooth curve.
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Usually you want to create something like the letter S, by dragging the right side up
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a little and the left side down a little.
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But again, I would use the split view and don't overdo it.
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Very small changes can be just fine here.
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If you finally have something that you're comfortable with, export the photo.
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When I do this, I append dash fixed to the original file name and keep the original file
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when I do this.
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Now this may sound very daunting, it doesn't have to be.
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If you're a graphic designer or some other type of visual artist, you should probably take
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the time to master all of these tools as part of your craft.
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But for a hobbyist who only takes holiday snapshots like me, maybe only one or two of these
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tweaks will do what is needed.
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Or one of my photos from Heidelberg, all I really needed to do is make the first adjustment
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in adjust color levels than I was fine with the result.
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With some of the other photos, I needed to go one or two steps further.
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The only thing you should care about is if you have photos you like.
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Now if you want a little more information, there's a video from Digitivity that I've
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put a link to in the show notes and you can check that out.
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Give you a little more information.
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Now the other thing is my wife has some pictures that are 50 years old that have not aged well.
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This is an example of a color problem because they have a strong green tint to them.
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Now that's probably due to degradation of the magenta dye in the film.
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The film colors are cyan magenta and yellow and magenta if it degrades just leave cyan
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and yellow and those of course combine to form green.
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Now GIMP can fix this to some degree and I'm going to give you a couple of ways to go
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about this.
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The easy one I'll start with is color balance.
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So again open your photo and GIMP.
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Go to the color menu and select color balance.
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This will open a pop up window.
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In this window you can adjust the colors for three different ranges, your shadows, midtones
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and highlights.
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You will see the biggest effect with midtones in most pictures but do work all three.
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Remember to use split view.
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Now the sliders underneath let you adjust individual color ranges and work by sliding
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toward one color and away from the complement.
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So if you slide towards cyan you will add more cyan to the picture and you will get less
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red.
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More magenta means less green, more yellow means less blue.
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Now this again it's trial and error.
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You won't get a perfect result right away but get it as close as you can and click OK
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to accept the changes and close the pop up window.
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For relatively minor adjustments this is a fairly easy approach.
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But not as flexible and powerful as the next method.
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And the next method goes back to what we were looking at before for dark photos and that
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is the adjust color levels.
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So you go to the color menu and select adjust color levels.
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Again it's a pretty similar process only now the color channels become even more important.
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So you want to use the sliders to adjust the red, green and blue levels is needed.
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Also make sure to check the output levels to fine tune the result.
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And when you get the best result click OK to close the pop up window and accept the picture
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and export the final product.
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Now if you have serious degradation this result is not going to be perfect.
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Gimp can only work with the information it has but I was able to get significantly better
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results on those old photos.
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Now I'm going to explain a little something and you can skip this if you're not interested
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in the details but you know all about histograms and those sliders what are they actually doing
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here.
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A histogram is a graph statisticians used to look at a frequency distribution which means
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how many observations fall into a certain range or category.
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In Gimp the histograms are telling you about the number of pixels with a certain value.
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So at the far left you have pure black or pure red or pure green or pure blue depending
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on what you've selected as your channel and on the right is pure white pure red etc.
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Now in the adjust color levels pop up when you leave it on value it is looking at all three
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channels together but that's the same as sort of a black and white because you're just
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looking at the overall darkness and lightness and not changing the balance of colors in
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any way.
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So a very dark picture will have a very high curve on the left because there's lots
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of dark pixels and a low curve on the right because there were fewer light pixels.
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The three triangle sliders help adjust the balance.
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If you pull the left most triangle to the right in other words towards the center you're
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telling Gimp to treat every pixel up to it including that value as pure black and that
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will darken the picture because you might have had some pixels that were sort of black
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now they're going to be totally black.
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Now if you pull the right most triangle to the left in other words towards the center
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you're telling Gimp to treat every pixel from that value upwards as if it was pure white.
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So it's going to lighten it.
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On the middle triangles for setting your midpoint when you move it to the left you are shrinking
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the area below the midpoint thus reducing the amount of darkness and so the image lightens.
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And of course moving it to the right increases the area below the midpoint making the image
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darker.
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Now something similar happens when you move to the color channels but it's not exactly
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intuitive here instead of the black and white balance you're working with the amount
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of color for example if you're on the red channel and you move the left most triangle to
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the right in other words towards the center which are actually telling Gimp is that all
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pixels to the left of that triangle should now be cyan the complement to red and this
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is counterintuitive because it wasn't that way when we were looking at the overall black
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white balance.
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So that will make the picture more blue and if you move the right most triangle to the
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left towards the center it tells the Gimp to make all pixels to the right of that red
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resulting in a redder picture.
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Now this is all done by mathematics of course since the essence of digital photography
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is to include the encode the level of colors as numbers.
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Gimp is an 8-bit program so the numbers range from 0 to 255 and you can see that under
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the sliders where there are numbers these show the position of the far left and far right
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sliders and you can fine tune them using the up and down arrows next to the number.
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Do you need to know this to use the tool?
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Perhaps not but it might help you to use it more effectively and again I'm going to give you
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a video to check this out because sometimes just listening to audio when we're talking about
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a visual art is not ideal so I've got to link in the show notes to something that you can
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check this out and with this I am concluding my Gimp series at least for now maybe something
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will come up that I want to add to it in the future but I have now done what I set out to do
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when I started the Gimp series was what I want to do is explain how you could use Gimp to
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fix problems with pictures and spend a lot of time talking about Gimp in general but I have now
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finally redeemed myself by doing what I said I would do all along.
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So with that this is Ahuka for Hacker Public Radio signing off and as always encouraging
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you to support free software bye bye
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's show was
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