![]() ![]() GIMP has an equivalent feature called Intelligent Scissors, which also features “interactive boundary” detection, but it requires you to continually click the mouse as you snip around the object, and its edge detection is more erratic. Take Photoshop CC’s Magnetic Lasso tool, for example, which allows you to gently guide the cursor around an object you wish to cut out, with the software automatically detecting ragged edges, such as ripples in a shirt. On the face of it, GIMP appears to have many of the same tools as Photoshop, but it’s only when you start toying with them that you realise Adobe’s software is significantly more sophisticated. While the interface looks a little dated, it’s clean, and not without thoughtful touches: the ever-present sliders to change variables such as opacity and threshold are marginally more accessible than the Photoshop alternatives, which are routinely two clicks away (unless you’re familiar with the keyboard shortcuts). ![]()
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