Hi all. Please see my previous mail for more context of this problem. Working with indexed images: I witnessed one very funky way of working with indexed images and I am not sure if I have fully wrapped my head around the ways they use some features of the proprietary tool they're using now. The tool in question does not provide multiple layers, but it does have some sort of floating selection. It however has funky means of dealing with indexed images. For each entry in the color palette you can a) set the resp. color to transparency and b) protect specific colors I've seen these features used in various workflows: * If you want to extend a patterned area you'd drag the pattern onto the canvas and roughly align it to an already patterned area. You'd then swich some colors to transparency, making it easier to align the patterns in a pixel exact manner. To actually do the expansion of the patterns you'd then make the colors visible again and drag on the bounding box of the pattern to extend it into the desired areas. That way it is ensured that the alignment of the new area fits the old area pixel perfectly. * if you want to combine a decor element of a pattern over a different pattern (with the same repeating properties) you can place the new pattern on top of the old one, then protect certain colors of the old pattern and expand the area of the new pattern by dragging on the bounding box. This basically places the new pattern "behind" certain areas (as defined by the protected colors) of the old pattern. This also can be used in conjunction with swiching some colors of the new pattern to transparent, making parts of the new pattern invisible. As I said, I was kind of swamped by the speed the operator toggled the properties of the different indexed colors and it was hard to judge what she actually was trying to do. I kind of suspect that it is worth evaluating if there are more straightforward ways to arrive at the same goal of the workflow, but right now I do not have specific ideas there. That having said: being able to "protect" some indexed colors (in a similiar way to a protected alpha channel maybe?) as well as temporarily making some indexed colors invisible/transparent might be helpful to other pixel based artists as well. Opinions? An interesting side problem is: If we had patterns with indexed colors and would want to use them in an indexed image - how could we go about mapping the two palettes to each other? I'd welcome input on that topic. Bye, Simon -- simon@xxxxxxxx http://simon.budig.de/ _______________________________________________ gimp-developer-list mailing list List address: gimp-developer-list@xxxxxxxxx List membership: https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gimp-developer-list List archives: https://mail.gnome.org/archives/gimp-developer-list