![]() Go ahead and close this out and bring the GIMP back up here, bring you down in here, and over here under Extensions, left-click, Script-FU, Refresh Scripts, OK. Oh and you can see that they all have the. Left-click, come on down here to Share, left-click, now you are here to GIMP, left-click, 2.0, left-click, and all the way down to scripts and left-click.Īnywhere in amongst here, these are all the scripts that, are by default, already installed. I’m heading to the GIMP folder, by the way. I’m going to open up my Windows Explorer, go to Explore, then go to Program Files. I’m just going to right-click and then left-click on copy so I got this on my clipboard. Let’s minimize this, minimize it again, bring this guy down here. Now I’m just gonna go and close that and let’s go ahead and what are we gonna do next. But I’m in Internet Explorer so I’m going to right-click on this, and go to “Save Target As”, give it a second, and just save it to the desktop. And you can do a Google search for different types of scripts and you’d be surprised just how many are already out there. ![]() Also here at the registry, like I said earlier, there’s a whole bunch of them. You’ve got probably a hundred or so of the scripts already installed by default in your GIMP system. What we wanna do now is we want to, after we’ve logged in, we wanna download the script for this dinky little file and also on your GIMP once you’ve downloaded it from the and you’ve installed the GIMP. Now that record of events that took place in the process of making all of these items here to the end-result of the animated flame. Somebody has basically gone through all these steps here and recorded them. And you just basically follow these steps here and you create it basically manually or with the script and that’s the jest of this particular video. That’s this tutorial I’m about to show you here. Now then what we wanna do now is I wanna show you how to create these flames. Just wanna give you a little heads up on that little captcha stuff. Then you just come on back here to the website and put in your username and the password they gave you and you can go on then and change your password. So after you screwed it up a couple of three to four times like I did, because I could never get it right, then go ahead and send me the information you need anyway to your email address. But we have, by the way, sent the log-in information you need to get in to the system to your email address. If you don’t, don’t sweat it because I’ll go ahead and tell you that sorry we’ve locked you out… blah. Do it like three or four different times and if you get it right, cool no prob. You know if you’re familiar with it at all, you know what I’m talking about. And I just could not figure out what those icons were or images were because it has to be exact. ![]() But I wanna let you know that I encountered a little problem with whenever you go to Sign Up, they have those little Captcha forms to determine whether or not you’re a human or a spam machine. And just to give a little heads up, I’ve already signed up and it’s completely free, and I’ve already logged in. Where I am at right now is probably one of the larger repositories or databases of already available scripts and it’s called the. Now I’m gonna back up here just for a second. Now what we’ve got here is an animated set of flames. Let me kinda show you what I’m talking about. Now in so far as what is a script, well where the GIMP is concerned what it is it’s kinda like a culmination of a bunch of actions that in with your decide results. This segment of our video series on the GIMP, we’re gonna be talking about installing scripts to your GIMP interface.
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