0 = maximum sharpening, and 99 is no sharpening.Īmount controls the strength of the sharpening effect higher values apply more sharpening. The Threshold value determines how different two pixels need to be for the sharpening effect to be applied. You want a large enough value to get a good affect, but not so large that it’s obvious. The Half-Size value controls the width of the sharpening lines. A radius is half of a diameter, so Half-Size is technically correct, but perhaps needlessly confusing. Most image editing software has Radius, Amount, and Threshold settings. You have three settings to play with: Half-Size, Amount, and Threshold. Then open Filter > Enhance > Unsharp Mask. My dog is terrified of her and runs away, but she is not discouraged.) First select an area with the “Select an area by its outline” tool. (Annabelle lives next door, but she has a crush on my dog and spends a lot of time here. In figure 5 I want to sharpen Annabelle’s face and eyes. Krita has a number of nice tools for making surgical edits. Now you can select text, add new text, change formatting, and so on. This opens editing mode, which is indicated by the text cursor. Click the Shape Handling tool, and double-click inside the text box. How to edit your existing text isn’t obvious. Figure 4 shows the gleeful captioned photo I send to my city-trapped relatives. The Tool Options for the Shape Handling tool include borders of various thicknesses, colors, and alignments. When you’re finished click the Shape Handling tool, which is the white arrow next to the Text tool button, to adjust the size, shape, and position of your text box. The Tool Options dock has all the usual text formatting options: font selector, font size, text and background colors, alignment, and a bunch of paragraph styles. This opens the simple text tool first draw a rectangle to contain your text, then start typing your text. Click the Text tool, and the Tool Options dock looks like figure 3.Ĭlick the Multiline button. When you want to add some simple text to a photo, such as a label or a caption, Krita may leave you feeling overwhelmed because it contains so many artistic text effects. In the Tools Options dock you can choose to apply the crop to all layers or just the current layer, adjust the dimensions by typing in the size values, or size it as a percentage. Draw a rectangle that contains the area you want to keep, use the drag handles to adjust it, and press the Return key. Of course there is a crop tool in the Tools dock, and it is very easy to use. The Tool Options dock always displays options for the current tool you are using, and by default it sits in the right pane. You have to hover your cursor over each tool to see its label. The Tools menu sits in the left pane, and this contains your shape and selection tools. There is also a dropdown zoom menu to the left of the slider. You can also use the View > Zoom controls, and the zoom slider at the bottom right. Ctrl+= zooms in, Ctrl+- zooms out, and Ctrl+0 resets to 100%. This comes with a little batch of preset workspaces, and you can create your own (figure 2). This is a button at the right end of the Brushes and Stuff toolbar (Settings > Toolbars Shown). When you have arranged your perfect workspace, you can preserve it in the “Choose Workspace” picker. If you drop a dock onto another dock they automatically create tabs. You can drag them to the top and sides of your Krita window, enlarge and shrink them, and you can drag them out of Krita to any location on your computer screen. The individual docks can drive you a little bit mad, as some of them open in a tiny squished aspect so you can’t see anything. Check Settings > Show Dockers to see your tool docks in the right and left panes, and Settings > Dockers to select the ones you want to see. I’m not a fan of dark themes, but fortunately Krita comes with a nice batch of themes that you can change anytime in the Settings > Theme menu. The default theme for Krita is a dark theme. It’s worth taking some time to explore it and to see where everything is. Like all image creation and editing programs, Krita contains hundreds of tools and options, and redundant controls for exposing and using them. Today we will learn how to add text to an image, and how to selectively sharpen portions of a photo. Krita is a wonderful drawing and painting program, and it’s also a nice photo editor.
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