We’re proud to present the first release of GIMP 3.2!

This marks a year of design, development, and testing from volunteers and our community.

Here are some of the many highlights to look out for:

Link Layers

You can now use Link Layers to incorporate external image as part of your compositions, easily scaling, rotating, and transforming them without losing quality or sharpness. It functions similar to the “Smart Object” concept from Photoshop. The Link Layer will automatically update if the external image is changed in another editor – for example, if you include a SVG logo as a Link Layer in GIMP, you can edit it in Inkscape and see the changes live in GIMP as well!

You can create a new Link Layer by choosing Open as Link Layer… in the File menu. You can change the image used at any time in the Layer Attributes dialog, which you can access by double-clicking the layer in the dock or by choosing Edit Layer Attributes… from the layer menu.

Vector Layers

The Path tool can now create Vector Layers, which lets you draw shapes with adjustable fill and stroke settings. The shape of the vector layer also automatically updates whenever you adjust the path, and you can non-destructively rotate, scale, and transform it too

PaintBrush improvements

The MyPaint Brush tool has been upgraded, adding 20 new brushes, including a much-requested arrow brush. It now automatically adjusts to your canvas zoom and rotation for more dynamic painting.

Better Text Editor

Our Text Editor has been the focus of several development projects to improve its usability and functionality. You can now drag the on-canvas text editor to move it out of the way when writing text. Several common shortcuts are now supported (such as Ctrl + B for bold, Ctrl + I for italics, and Shift + Ctrl + V for pasting unformatted text).

Non-Destructive Filter Updates

As well as working on new non-destructive layers (vector layers, link layers, and text layers), we’ve also been working on the non-destructive filters! You can now apply filters to channels non-destructively, in addition to layers and layer groups.

Overwrite Mode

A new Overwrite paint mode allows you to draw over existing colors without blending their transparency. It has many useful applications when working with pixel art

UX/UI improvements

This release includes a TON of small user interface and user experience improvements

New System color scheme

There is a new system color scheme for default themes. If set, it will automatically update GIMP’s theme colors to match the current OS settings.

Automatic transparency

The Crop Tool and NDE filters now automatically add transparency to a layer when necessary, rather than requiring you to remember to do it manually.

Switch between tools easily

You can now quickly switch back and forth between your 2 most recent tools with the Shift + X shortcut

Welcome Dialog improvements

The Welcome Dialog has received improvements to help streamline user workflows.

It now recognizes the Ctrl + 0, 1, 2… 9 shortcuts for opening the most recent images.

It now recognizes your shortcuts to create a new image, or open an existing one (whether the respective default Ctrl + N or Ctrl + O, or your custom shortcuts)

The Welcom Dialog no longer appears if you intentionally open GIMP with an image

Flip images with your keyboard

The Flip and Shear Tools now respond to the arrow keys, similar to the Move and Rotate Tools.

Flip Tool: You can use the Left and Right arrows to flip the image horizontally, and the Up and Down arrows to flip it vertically.

Shear Tool: You can use the Left and Right arrows to shear your image horizontally, and the Up and Down arrows to do the same vertically. Like the Move tool, you can hold down Shift to shear with a larger value.

For Script and Plug-in Developers

GIMP 3.0 brought non-destructive filters and a new GimpDrawableFilter API for script developers to create them. However, it wasn’t easy to find the names and properties for the extensive list of potential filters, especially for third-party GEGL filters. A new GEGL Filter browser has been added to make it easier to find non-destructive filters to use.

New formats

GIMP 3.2 includes built-in support for even more file formats! These range from well-known formats like APNGs to obsolete archival formats such as Seattle FilmWorks photos, supporting your quest of old data retrieval. For retro game developers, we now support Sony PlayStation TIM and Sega Dreamcast PVR textures.

We also added export support for JPEG 2000 images, which is the standard for the digital cinema industry. This now matches our import support, which we’ve had since GIMP 2.8

In addition to our existing darktable and RawTherapee plug-ins, we’ve added support for using ART for editing Camera RAW images.

As a side effect of adding support for NASA‘s .hgt.zip image format, GIMP can now load compressed images from any format that we currently support.

Total Ink Coverage value

You can now see the Total Ink Coverage value for a color in the CMYK Color Selector. This is useful to know when soft-proofing your image for printing, as your printer may have an ink coverage limit to prevent over-saturation of the page.

https://www.gimp.org/release-notes/gimp-3.2.html#usability-improvements

This release is a true GAME CHANGER!! Nothing will ever be the same. Adobe just got punched right in the face.

You can support Gimp

Thank you SO MUCH to developers, designers, translators, testers, donors and all members of our community 👏🏼👏🏼

  • UnfinishedProjects@piefed.zip
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    2 days ago

    Wow, never knew this existed. I usually don’t use gimp all that much compared to inkscape - so I’m not sure if it’s worth the trouble…but this is very nice. I honestly don’t know what they wouldn’t pull these settings into the default gimp, even if only as an alternative skin option you can select.

    The major drawback of gimp for many people is the interface, I think. That’s why blender has really taken off since it’s UI/UX update.

    • Pennomi@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      It wasn’t until a couple years ago that GIMP finally made single window mode the default. They are irrationally against fixing their UI.

      • Pommes_für_dein_Balg@feddit.org
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        1 day ago

        No they are just severely limited by dev time (and even more by a lack of UI designers). They have less than a thousandth of Adobe’s resources. Why don’t you help improve it?

        • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          It’s not dev time to fix UI complaints that have been made for 20 years. They have added hundreds of complex features in that time.

          It was their ethos to not be Photoshop no matter how convoluted their alternative workflow needed to be.

          • Pommes_für_dein_Balg@feddit.org
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            1 day ago

            PhotoGIMP doesn’t fundamentally improve anything. It just rearranges the tools and keyboard shortcuts to copy Photoshop.

            Personally I tried it and hated it, cause I’m used to the GIMP layout and never used Photoshop.

            And the purpose of GIMP isn’t and never was to just be a copy of Photoshop.
            Trying to turn it into one will attract lawsuits.

            • AlfredoJohn@sh.itjust.works
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              35 minutes ago

              If having shortcut remaps wasnt useful or it was a legal nightmare, all the big ides would not have the ability to change their shortcut mappings to match other ides in order to make transitions easier for developers. Its a huge win for accessibility to ones software and basically just comes down to putting your shortcut definitions into a config file that can be swapped and allowing others to create maps to be added. I cant imagine that being the biggest hurdle, even if all the devs for gimp did was abstract shortcut definitions to a config file they could then allow others to submit PRs to add additional options for users to choose from.

            • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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              5 hours ago

              Trying to turn it into one will attract lawsuits

              Photoshop wasn’t the inventor of their GUI. There were many paint programs that predate Photoshop that Photoshop based their GUI on.

              And there hasn’t been a “look and feel” lawsuit since Apple sued Microsoft.

            • Abrinoxus@lemmy.today
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              1 day ago

              So what if you hate it and never used ps, point is, make the transition easier for those who do. I showed photogimp for a coworker who wants to be free of ps subscription but never used anything but windows and she is gimpified now