About Paint.Net
Paint.NET is free image and photo editing software for computers that run Windows. It features an intuitive and innovative user interface with support for layers, unlimited undo, special effects, and a wide variety of useful and powerful tools. An active and growing online community provides friendly help, tutorials, and plugins.
Paint.Net is designed to work with raster images (e.g. photo's) so can be categorized along side with pay-for image editing applications such as Photoshop and Paintshop Pro.
Paint.NET is free image and photo editing software for computers that run Windows. It features an intuitive and innovative user interface with support for layers, unlimited undo, special effects, and a wide variety of useful and powerful tools. An active and growing online community provides friendly help, tutorials, and plugins.
Paint.Net is designed to work with raster images (e.g. photo's) so can be categorized along side with pay-for image editing applications such as Photoshop and Paintshop Pro.
Some key features of Paint.Net include:
Image Cropping, re-sizing
Output to different image formats
Functions such as red-eye removal and artistic
effects
Drawing functions (e.g. freehand brush, shapes, curves,
fill tool)
Basic tool text
Layered images (an image can be constructed from two or
more images stacked in front of each other)
Paint.NET
Introduction
1. Open Paint.NET
Double-click
on the Paint.NET icon if present on your desktop.
2. Open background image
(pond)
First,
you're going to open a photograph of a pond. To this, we will add a couple of
ducks.
Select
File > Open... , press CTRL + O or click the file open
icon
Browse
to the
S:\Share\_Bucci\Paint.net\Pond and select pond.jpg and click Open
3. Save the file
In
order to maintain the highest image quality and work with layers, the file needs
to be saved in the Paint.NET format (.pdn). This is a proprietory format (don't
worry - the final output can be saved later in a number of alternative formats),
with a similar purpose to (but not compatible with!) Photoshop .psd or Paint
Shop Pro .psp files.
Select File > Save As... (or CTRL + SHIFT +
S)
In
the File Name: box, type a name for
the file (e.g. pondimage)
Browse
to the folder H:\My Documents\Technology
6,7, or 8\Images
In the Save as
type: drop-down box select Paint.NET
(*.pdn)
Select
Save
4. Add a duck
This section introduces the concept of layers and
transparency.
Select
Layers
> Import From File...
You
should be taken straight to the S:\Share\_Bucci\Paint.net\ directory,
if not then browse to it as before
Select
duck.pdn and click Open
The
'Layers' palette (at the bottom-right of the Paint.NET screen by default) now
displays 2 layers with a background layer ('pond') and a second layer 'duck'.
Layers take precedence the further up the stack they are (so on the main image,
the duck is not obscured by the pond).
If you cannot see the layers palette, select Window > Layers or press F7
5. Select, resize and move the
duck
Selecting the
duck
The 'duck' layer should be selected (has a moving
dashed border around it). If it isn't, do the
following:
Ensure
the 'duck' layer is highlighted (grey)
You're going to 'draw' a selection rectangle around the
duck:
1. Click and hold the area where you
want the top-left of the rectangle to start
2. Move the cursor to where you want the bottom-right
corner to be and release the mouse button.
You should now have a rectangle around the duck
Moving the duck
From
the 'Tools' palette, ensure that the 'Move Selected Pixels' icon is selected
Click
and hold
anywhere inside the selection rectangle (away from the edges though) and move
the duck to somewhere on the pond to the right of the image, below the
island
You should now have a duck selected that looks similar
to:
Resizing the duck
Move
the mouse cursor over one of the corners of the rectangle so that it changes to
a hand cursor
Hold
down
the SHIFT key and click and hold the rectangle
corner
Move
the cursor towards the center of the rectangle to make the duck smaller (moving
it the other way will make it larger
Release
the mouse button when you're happy with the size
Keeping
the shift key held down during this process 'constrains proportions'. This means
that the image doesn't become 'stretched'
You can re-position the duck in the same way as before
Now
save your file
Download and install application
Download and install application
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