From: gl4317 on
In article <jwolf6589-2D7F01.21501531032010(a)nntp.charter.net>, John
<jwolf6589(a)NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote:

> I lost it when I bought my new Mac as it wont run Classic. So I need a
> replacement. Not sure if Graphic Convert will do the job.
>
> I nee a app to clean up, crop, use filters, retouch, and play with
> photos. I am not sure if Graphic Convert will do the job.


I still use the classic version of GraphicConverter on a computer that
still runs an older operating system. So, GC may have changed. But, the
version of GC that I have is shareware. I downloaded the thing from an
FTP site, tried it out, and liked it. The fully paid version has more
features that are unlocked when you pay the fee.

If it still works the same, why not download a copy and try it? It's not
like it costs anything to try it out.

--
-Glennl
Please note this e-mail address is a pit of spam, and most e-mail sent to this address are simply lost in the vast mess.
From: gl4317 on
In article <300320102333137245%nospam(a)nospam.invalid>, nospam
<nospam(a)nospam.invalid> wrote:

> In article <gl4317-3003102022430001(a)69-30-9-164.pxd.easystreet.com>,
> <gl4317(a)yahoo.com> wrote:

> > Photoshop saves the files in its own native format, with all the layers
> > and other stuff built right into the file. You then export to GIF, JPEG,
> > etc., or keep it as a GIF, JPEG, etc. without saving the native format.
> > GraphicConverter has no such native format. You edit the pixels you have.
>
> both are editing the pixels you have,


No. In its native file format, Photoshop can save such things as vectors
and text for editing afterward. GraphicConverter converts text to pixels
when it is finalized, not allowing one to edit the text afterward. There
aren't layers. (At least, not in the version I have.)

--
-Glennl
Please note this e-mail address is a pit of spam, and most e-mail sent to this address are simply lost in the vast mess.
From: Jeffrey Goldberg on
[c.s.m.system removed from follow-ups. This is a discussion for apps]

John wrote:

> I am wondering if the current GC will do the job for me. Just need a app
> that can crop, retouch, filter, change, and mess with photos.

It depends on what you mean by "retouch", "change" and "mess with".
For some meanings of those expressions GC and iPhoto are enough. For
other meanings it is sorely lacking.

For the record I should mention GIMP. It's free, it's powerful, and it
is a real pain to learn and use. If you can put up with its terrible
user interface, it should do everything you want.

-j

--
Jeffrey Goldberg http://goldmark.org/jeff/
I rarely read HTML or poorly quoting posts
Reply-To address is valid
From: gl4317 on
In article <jwolf6589-59FA0C.21564431032010(a)nntp.charter.net>, John
<jwolf6589(a)NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote:

> I am wondering if the current GC will do the job for me. Just need a app
> that can crop, retouch, filter, change, and mess with photos.


One of the things that I really miss about GraphicConverter when I use
photoshop is the cropping tool. Photoshop has probably changed since the
old version I have where I work was put out, but GraphicConverter has a
nice little display in the upper right corner that gives the size of the
resulting cropped image. If you need, say, a 560 x 500 for a web page,
you can select one corner of what you want and as you move the rectangle
it gives you a reading of the resulting image size as you move the other
end of the rectangle. You can then move the other corner of the rectangle
to the exact location to fit the size you want. You then select "Trim
Selection" from the menu.

In Photoshop, you choose the crop tool and just roughly guess at the image
size as you crop it. You then have to choose Image Size from the menu to
see what the actual resulting image size is after the crop.

--
-Glennl
Please note this e-mail address is a pit of spam, and most e-mail sent to this address are simply lost in the vast mess.
From: nospam on
In article <81ilv3FlsU1(a)mid.individual.net>, TaliesinSoft
<taliesinsoft(a)me.com> wrote:

> And what of significance does Photoshop Elements do that Pixelmator doesn't?

a lot, including camera raw, adjustment layers (major shortcoming),
layer masks, layer styles, healing brush and a huge selection of
photoshop plug-ins.