Between the photo editor based on Krita and the quick sketch interface based on Krita, don't both of these sound like options that would do well with the workscape proposal I had made? Maybe people see now why I had proposed it in the first place? Upon starting Krita, users would be faced with a few buttons: - photo editing - sketch - paint - general And depending on which one is selected, the relevant plugins and interface settings are loaded. I'd actually not be pro- a stand-alone sketching program, the simple reason being that people have Many different ways of sketching in a picture: - some like to go freehand - some like to use path tools for smoother lines - I'm wishing for the option of using a tablet, while lines are constrained along a path, so that I can get both smooth and line variations - some wish to go for a "rough" sketch effect, and would thus probably want to use Krita's future painting tools (Chinese brush etc) - and while some scan in lineart, others prefer to sketch digitally First, then trace That (or sketch digitally, print out, trace in pencil then ink then scan it back in) - did I mention that some people don't just sketch lineart? So while a sketch workspace is fine (that offers you most basic sketching tools while giving you the option of hiding those you don't need), having all the other tools handy (thus, having the rest of Krita handy, just not necessarily on the top-level interface) could be useful. The other advantage of having the rest of Krita handy within a workspace setting is that users can easily find other functions they need and readjust the interface to their own needs. ____________________________________________________________________________________ Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ _______________________________________________ kimageshop mailing list kimageshop@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kimageshop