Krita 1.6 — State of the Art
brendan0powers writes to tell us Linux.com is reporting that while Krita 1.6 may have been released with the rest of the KOffice suite this week it is anything but a run-of-the-mill piece of productivity software. Krita is a 'fully-loaded raster graphics workhorse' definitely capable of standing up to most anything else available. Linux.com and Slashdot are both owned by OSTG.
lmbo asdfadsf
Hey look! A line tool! CMYK support! And layers! This thing may actually be usable!
While the comparisons to Photoshop and The Gimp are inevitable, Krita is one of the more advanced components of KOffice. For me, it long ago replaced The Gimp as my image editor of choice. If you are looking for a good image editor for Linux/BSD, you owe it to yourself to investigate Krita.
Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
Okay, so I've never heard of it. Not unusual - there are lots of killer apps out there I've never heard of. But, um, how does it stack up to the other "'fully-loaded raster graphics workhorse'" programs out there. More importantly, what are those others. ATTFA, MS Office Picture Manager isn't one. Okay. So it must be more like...um...anything in the article...no.
.x version now". Which is fine, but really front page news?
Okay, so where does it fit in the Photoshop, PaintShopPro, GIMP arena? Is it simpler, easier? More powerful (it is a fully loaded workhorse, after all)?
Maybe this is just a "hey - all you guys with the old Krita - there's a new
So, is this really sliced bread, or just a little bump in the feature set of KOffice?
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
- Fits my theme, since I run KDE, and
- Manages to restrict itself to a sensible one window, with sub panels and panes that can be moved around within the window, or floated without losing focus on the other windows.
Can you tell what I didn't like about using The GIMP?You don't hear about Krita nearly as often as The GIMP (or, of course, Photoshop), but it seems to be a great alternative. I can't speak for graphics professionals (not being one myself), but it gets the job done for what I need to do. I look forward to this new version, and I hope development continues on this hidden gem of an image editor.
Linux needs to get its act together
/tmp or the installer will dump core. After the installer is done, edit /etc/X11/XF86Config and add a section called "GL" and put "driver nv" in it. Make sure you have the latest version of X and Linux kernel 2.6 or else X will segfault when you start. OK, run the Quake 3 installer and make sure you set the proper group and setuid permissions on quake3.bin. If you want sound, look here [link to another obscure web site], which is a short HOWTO on how to get sound in Quake 3. That's all there is to it!"
Linux is *not* user friendly, and until it is linux will stay with less than 1% marketshare.
Take installation. Linux zealots are now saying "oh installing is so easy, just do apt-get install package or emerge package": Yes, because typing in "apt-get" or "emerge" makes so much more sense to new users than double-clicking an icon that says "setup".
Linux zealots are far too forgiving when judging the difficultly of Linux configuration issues and far too harsh when judging the difficulty of Windows configuration issues. Example comments:
User: "How do I get Quake 3 to run in Linux?"
Zealot: "Oh that's easy! If you have Redhat, you have to download quake_3_rh_8_i686_010203_glibc.bin, then do chmod +x on the file. Then you have to su to root, make sure you type export LD_ASSUME_KERNEL=2.2.5 but ONLY if you have that latest libc6 installed. If you don't, don't set that environment variable or the installer will dump core. Before you run the installer, make sure you have the GL drivers for X installed. Get them at [some obscure web address], chmod +x the binary, then run it, but make sure you have at least 10MB free in
User: "How do I get Quake 3 to run in Windows?"
Zealot: "Oh God, I had to install Quake 3 in Windoze for some lamer friend of mine! God, what a fucking mess! I put in the CD and it took about 3 minutes to copy everything, and then I had to reboot the fucking computer! Jesus Christ! What a retarded operating system!"
So, I guess the point I'm trying to make is that what seems easy and natural to Linux geeks is definitely not what regular people consider easy and natural. Hence, the preference towards Windows.
GIMP gets a bit irritating after a while. Yes, they've made great improvements on the UI with 2.3 but it's nice to try something fresh sometimes...
Powerful, yet still easy to use?
Engineering is the art of compromise.
What options are there to edit RAW photo files under Linux? Does Krita handle those format(s)? It doesn't seem to....what does?
"What options are there to edit RAW photo files under Linux? "
A hex editor.
I've been poking around with Krita 1.6, and I'm impressed. The Krita developers seem to have a much better understanding of how a simple-yet-effective FLOSS raster graphics app should work and look like. The GIMP has always seemed too complex for the casual user, but too shaggy and feature-poor for the serious graphics person.
The Krita developers are doing a laudable effort to grow their application carefully and intentionally, just like the Scribus has done, adding high priority features and implementing them well (Krita's new layer-groups implementation worked very well for me without getting in the way).
If it continues this way, Krita is likely to grab significant mindshare from the GIMP.
Online citizen journalism from the inner city: The View From The Ground
Very slow and clunky. Ugly as sin. Memory use a-go-go. Irritating KDE-style one-click interface for the file selector. Indispensable for its ability to handle CMYK and 16+bit.
I don't need it often and I'm always glad to close it afterwards, but until the Gimp handles 16bit at least for its working space, there's no way to live without it and do photo-manip under Linux.
"Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
Yes, I know the Gimp interface has good reasons why it needs to be awkward.
...) use.
But I would like to see Krita with a GTK front end. KDE and GNOME baggage are too much. Make the switch to XFCE, and you will be relieved. GTK with no extra bulk is what modern applications (Firefox, Gaim,
After one month of Kubuntu, I just couldn't take it anymore. Krita was just too... unnatural. I'm not a graphic artist (far from it), but when I picked up the GIMP I was able to find out how to do things by using common sense. Krita felt really clunky and slow, and the buttons were never where you thought they should be. GIMP is the superior open source tool IMHO.
I must be a complete idiot when it comes to KDE apps. I normally use Gnome, but I thought I'd try Krita out. I did a 'yum install koffice-krita' and it installed normally. I tried to load up a photograph in Krita, but I could not figure out how to do it. I tried 'krita somepic.jpg' and that didn't work. I tried a File->Open and that didn't work. Can someone that is a KDE expert tell me how to use a KDE app?
Has anyone compiled a stand-alone package for OS X (X11)? I don't want to have to install fink again and spend all night compiling just to try this out.
One month? This is about Krita 1.6 which got just released a week ago. And Krita 1.6 is a HUGE improvement over the 1.5 you're talking about. It's a lot faster and has come a long way since. I'd really urge you to upgrade and give it another try. Like Amarok Krita had for sure its weak spots in its early releases but it's rapidly maturing and I predict that within 9 months - even through minor point releases it will become THE graphics application for Linux.
Does it acheive a goal that couldn't have been achived within the GIMP codebase with less effort? E.g. different UI modes?
Surely a name starting with a K instead of a G wan't enough?
I don't see how this kind of replication of effort best serves the adoption of Linux on the desktop in the long run.
-- http://thegirlorthecar.com funny dating game for guys
At first glance, it looks more like Corel Painter than it does The Gimp/Photoshop. I haven't bothered to try it, that's just based on TFA and the screenie.
Unfortunately, for me it's just excruciatingly slow and sluggish compared to The GIMP, which is installed and running fine and reasonably quickly on the same Kubuntu Edgy system. Too bad, as I liked pretty much everything about it except for the crippling slowness.
Oppressing an entire population is never cheap.
--Jeckler (/. Beta IS GARBAGE!)
I installed the filters and it does indeed now load up jpeg's. It's kinda lame for it to ask me what filter to apply when loading the jpg. Shouldn't it just know the file type?
ImageMagick will let you quick convert raw files to PNG or whatnot by specifying the width/height/pixel format/depth as options. You can have it process a whole folder if you want.
GIMP likes tagged formats. I recall there being a RAW import method in the 1.xx series but it looks like they got rid of it.
THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
Typical KDE app - too many buttons everywhere not enough sense and just like every kde app in every version, it crashes if you sneeze.
I dare anyone to actually use this piece of crap in production and have it actually not crash if you blink.
Why can't KDE devs actually make sensible interfaces?
At an intersection not far from my house there are two strip malls on two of the corners. Each mall has a sandwich shop.
;^)
"Does it acheive a goal that couldn't have been achived within the [one sandwich shop] with less effort? E.g. different [special sauces in the same shop]?
"Surely a [different] name for [each store] wan't enough?
"I don't see how this kind of replication of effort best serves the [sales of sandwiches to the populace] in the long run."
It depends. Now that Qt for Windows is free software, when does Krita come out on Microsoft Windows?
Krita is fine but I wish they would do some more work on the object based graphics program, Karbon, it has some great features that the others programs don't (making a large drawing and priting it in tiles) but it is sorely lacking some very basic stuff also (import of bitmap obnjects like in Inkscape and OOo Draw). Oh and providing ANY instructions for it would be a big bonus too.
I just don't do just plain bitmap graphics all that much.
"Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
Man, is this linux shit for fags or what? Fags who like to suck dicks and get aids.
The one thing Krita cannot - run on Windows, wheras Gimp does.
That one feature is enough for me, as we have several computers in my family, and not all of them run Linux. Yes, it is installed on the Linux box.
There are two very nice importer plug-ins. (FYI, both are supplied by Debian) I can mess with things as desired during the import, properly handling color temperature and such before dealing with it like any other image.
If you mean to save something back as RAW format, well that is nonsense.
Also, Google provides photo software with some raw format support.
A gimp is a midget or dwarf used for homosexual purposes.
You didn't want to know that, did you?
"rita" is Swedish for "draw". Add the KDE K to get "Krita", which means "crayon" in Swedish. A coincidence?
By the way I just found this on the web.. a little outdated, but fairly interesting and promising:
g imp.html
OpenUsability Sponsored Student Project: GIMP
OpenUsability is proud to announce the offering of a series of sponsored student projects. As the first project, the GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP) has been chosen. We are looking for a student in usability or interaction architecture who wants to work on designing the user interface for the next generation of GIMP.
If you are a student of usability, user-interface or interaction design and want to enrich your education with a hands-on experience don't hesistate to apply:
http://www.openusability.org/studentprojects
http://openusability.org/projects/gimp/
http://www.gimp.org/announcements/open-usability-
From the article: "Nevertheless, the vision is for Krita to be more about creating images than about manipulating them."
The Cimg homepage is here. But if you want to see what it can do, check out some of the sample image restorations on page 6 of this paper. It does a very credible job of restoring missing parts of images, e.g. features hidden behind text.
Hi, I'm just a GIMP fan; Krita has cool features, so I have some random questions on how Krita is progressing. (Obligatory disclaimer: Not intended as a troll or anything. I'm just clueless.)
1) Has the UI been fixed? The use of MDI made it difficult as hell to use - X11 has application window groups and virtual desktops for a reason, you know. Can the palettes etc. be docked in separate windows? In 1.5 the stuff can be undocked from the windows, but they're all separate, and their locations aren't particularly well remembered, which makes that feature pretty much useless (Eh, toolbox, 5 tool strips and 3 tool windows open, as opposed to my usual 3-window setup in GIMP, and those locations are remembered - plus they're all duplicated for each window, which is pretty odd)...
2) How's the tablet support? The pressure support in 1.5 appears to be pretty... strange, to say the least. Is there any equivalent of GIMP's ink tool? I couldn't find any from 1.5 based on a cursory examination, and the brush tool didn't work at all like I expected it to work (ticking on the brush transparency made transparency effect work pretty weakly, as happened with the size - I suppose this can be adjusted to have more dramatic effect, but I couldn't find it).
3) Is there anyone who's using both GIMP and Krita; how well does image interchange work between the two apps? I haven't investigated how well I could move .xcfs, for example, between the two apps. I know Krita can use some GIMP bits, like fill patterns and brushes and like; does the opposite work too?
...I live in 2006.
Trust me, I work for the government.
How can I adjust an image's brightness/contrast? I can't seem to find it anywhere... Are there any Krita tutorials online?
This is not a personal criticism, just a slight tweak in your wording...
Evolution has nothing to do with producing the "BEST" anything. Evolution produces the "most fit for survival". Saying that "evolution is (...) varying the combination of a lot of existing stuff ever so slightly to see which one produces the best" implies a higher purpose or thought behind the random mutations that evolution exploits. The truth is that most of this "varying" produces less fit entities and they quickly die. That doesn't mean they were worse, just less fit.
There could arise a disease tomorrow that kills off everybody but hemophiliacs. Eventually, only hemophiliacs would survive. Does that make them the "best" humans? No, simply the most fit to survive that particular threat. Think that's a silly example? Tell that to all the people with sickle cell anemia who have a natural resistance to malaria.
Richard Dawkins once said, "It is almost as if the human brain were specifically designed to misunderstand Darwinism". Thinking that evolution produces things which are better is one of those misunderstandings. It simply produces things which are more fit to survive and reproduce given a particular environment.
Krita looks much less capable than The Gimp. For example, there is no way in Krita to measure the distance between two positions in an image.
I tried it too (1.5 though, I am not going to pull kde libs from Debian unstable). It feels so slow and non-responsive! Set of tools on the toolbar seems "mspaint-ish" (rectangle, star, zigzag...). In addition, layer blending is not working for me.
So, GIMP stays for most of the tasks, for 16+ bit and HDR color I use Cinepaint.
P.S. I don't like some of the GIMP UI features, e.g. huge crop dialog, which closes significant part of my laptop screen and stays on top of the image. New window placement is not very convenient. New windows often open just over the toolbar (I think GIMP should suggest WM where to open windows). Toolbars do not "pop-up" as I switch to image window. However, GIMP seems to be more capable and polished than Krita at this moment.
> Krita
Man, I hated Krita!
She told me she would help me regain my strength, but it turns out she was the bitch Darth Trayus -- the Betrayer.
And you "get Jedi powers from the beginning" -- how misleading! It actually takes longer to get your lightsaber in the second game.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
Ouch! Your random spelling of homophones drives me crazy!
Are you also irritated that the internet uses a one-click interface as well.
Why exactly do you like double-clicking? for the exercise?
K=min(1-R, 1-G, 1-B)
C=1-R-K
M=1-G-K
Y=1-B-K
Easy as pie.
Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!