![]() ![]() The Vignette filter now has on-canvas controls to visually manipulate the geometry of the vignette rather than enter numeric values in a dialog. If you want the old “destructive” behavior back, simply tick the ‘Delete cropped pixels’ checkbox in Crop tool’s settings. When you are on the fence about your cropping decision, you can view pixels that you cropped out by going to View -> Show All.If you save your project as an XCF file, you can close the file and even quit GIMP and still be able to remove cropping and then crop differently at any time later.None of your edits between cropping and uncropping will disappear. You can revert to the original uncropped version by going to Image -> Fit Canvas to Layers. ![]() The benefit of that is (at least) threefold: If you export such an image, the resulted file will only have what you see within canvas boundaries. Instead of deleting pixels that you cropped out and thus changing both the layer and the canvas, it will simply resize the canvas. GIMP now provides a kind of a non-destructive cropping behavior by default. This option is enabled by default when the toolbox is arranged in a single column, but it can be enabled for arbitrary toolbox layouts, or disabled entirely, through the Toolbox page of the Preferences dialog.Īdditionally, when not using the new behavior, toolbox tooltips now list all the tools in a group, to improve their discoverability. The new release adds the option to show the tool-group menu as soon as the mouse hovers over the toolbox button, without having to click it. A lot of people told us they appreciated the change in general but were quite averse to having to click to open the list of tools in a group. We listened to users’ feedback on introducing tool groups in the toolbox in the previous release. We wish you all the best health! by Aryeom, Creative Commons by-sa 4.0 Toolbox updates ¶
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