> I had hoped that Krita would grow into a replacement for Gimp. There is > already Kolor Paint as a pure painting program. If I have misunderstood > the rationale of Krita someone please correct my thinking. KolorPaint isn't a pure painting program. It's a lightweight painting and image editing application. Krita is a high-end painting and image editing application. The main goal is to give the tool to be creative with your image, with a strong emphasie on giving the best tool to create image from scratch. So there is an overlap with the gimp, but both tools are not equivalent. > I am not a fan of office suites in any case. Too often ease of use by > absolute beginners is emphasized over quality of output. Perhaps KWord is > the bad child that gives the whole family a bad name. In KDE/Koffice > there are several overlapping graphic programs that try to do many of the > same things. Is there ? I guess you mean Karbon and Kivio. Well they address two differents things, one is a general vectorial editor, and the other one is dedicated to flowcharts editing. While you can draw a flowchart with a vector editor, a UI dedicated to flowchart editing is not toy. > For a long time now users of Gimp have asked for two things: native cmyk > color model and 16 bit color depth. These seem to be asymptotic goals---we > never quite get there. But Krita has cmyk out of the box. and 16bit :) (event 32bit) -- Cyrille Berger _______________________________________________ kimageshop mailing list kimageshop@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kimageshop