![]() ![]() Where to provide a resilient, persistent repository for all flavours? I do not know, maybe github. Non-Debian users can usually get just the plugin from their repo. Who needs all that rubbish for the occasional gem. Resynthesizer As its name suggests, Resynthesizer captures the texture or background of an image and re-generates it to allow you to get rid of elements in an image and seamlessly blend it. 164 script-fu’s (including some misplaced. The Debian 'gimp-plugin-registry package. really have liked it, I got the DVD version which includes a generous software bundle, with one of those items being gimp 2.10.8. They also have a blog, with resynthesizer included but not that easy to navigate. About a year ago I started using a live distribution of Debian called 'knoppix', installed it onto a flashdrive. Maybe you could twist their arm(s) and get a good up-to-date 64 bit version. This should be the best one for Windows Users, The samj’s make good Windows plug-ins. The linux version is the same as 1) version 1, 32 bit binaries. (which prompted that 1.1 Windows zip I made back in 2013) Should be consigned to history. ![]() The old (now archived) gimp.registry - this is version 1, Windows and a Linux binaries, both 32 bit. tgz plugin and copy the contents in the ResynthesizerPlugin-Gimp-2.10-osx folder to /Applications/GIMP-2.10.app/Contents/Resources/lib/gimp/2.0/plug-ins Try to run the Resynthesizer plugin on an image (Filters > Enhance > Heal selection) in GIMP. Maybe you have some influence there to get an update. ![]() Of course that's no longer a specific need for me personally, that's just where my "orphaned" comment stems from.Not really good advice. So it's kind of surprising that the gimp devs have not incorporated similar functionality, into the basic package.įWIW, as far as my "orphaned" comment, I thought when we discussed some time ago how modern distributions of Linux had dropped python 2 support.I asked if there might be a python 3 compatible update in store for resynthesizer.and I thought someone said that the original developer had gone MIA or similar. There are other means, (clone/smudge etc) but in the 95% of the time where it works flawlessly, it's pretty close to a point and click solution. I see questions here about resynth over and over again.Īnd, I'd hate to think about having to work without it. I guess that I should just be thankful to have working copies in both my W64 and Linux 32 working environments (the latter of which I am especially beholding to you).īut it just tickled me the way you said "for the n-th time" and it's true. At the end of the day, it is only a small set of files and Gimp is built around plugins. All about the additional 'heal selection' python plugins which I think are invaluable. I wonder how many actually put resynthesizer to its intended use, making seamless patterns ? I have not seen a query about that in some time. Not difficult to compile in linux, I have a 'colormatch-branch' resynth with a python GUI in place of the regular binary GUI and that is about 3 years old. The Parthia version is 64 bit and about as up-to-date for Win as any, unless you compile it yourself. Fair enough as it is 'universal' but there can not be that many 32 bit Gimp users around these days. If you follow say, that Davies Media video, it takes you to this: which is a 10 year old 32 bit compilation. Not so much orphaned as not much (any) developments in the Windows environment. ![]() I'm surprised the main program developers have not just kinda absorbed the plugin, and made it native to gimp? I believe you stated at one point that Resynthesizer had been orphaned?. ![]()
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