Simple image editor?Is there a program like Microsoft Paint?Lightweight (graphical) image editorBasic Photo Editing tool suggestionsProgram like Windows Paint for cutting and copy edittingIs there something as simple and easy to use as Paint?Photo editing softwareTool comparable to Windows Paint that would run on LinuxFirst time Ubuntu user looking fir a basic image editing softwareUbuntu equivalent for Mspaint.exe?Simple image editor tool to draw a simple box/rectangle in an existing imageNeed an image editor with simple font selectionImage analysis softwareSimple editor with colored fontsImage manager (picasa like)Image editor with High-Pass equivalentlight weight image editor that can support pgm format in linuxWhat programs support PAM image format?Looking for a bitmap editor for screenshots

Does animal blood, esp. human, really have similar salinity as ocean water, and does that prove anything about evolution?

Why distinguish u/v but not i/j?

Is a for loop using arrays better than using field splitting on a simple variable?

How does kinetic energy work in braking a vehicle?

Mutate my DNA sequence

Why is more music written in sharp keys than flat keys?

What does exhaust smell on oil and transmission dipstick mean?

Countering an uncounterable spell, triggers, and state-based actions

A jazzy one-liner

"traversal failed: u: Bad message" when deleting an extremely large directory in Linux

What do I get by paying more for a bicycle?

Why am I having wrong IPs in my DNS?

Make a haystack (with a needle)

Can a company prevent a co-author of a paper from putting his name on it?

Protecting Seals from Forgery

Why is double encryption that's equivalent to single encryption no better than single encryption?

What set of notes can be used as a scale?

A word/phrase means "a small amount" (of a color)

True or False: If the product of n elements of a group is the identity element, it remains so no matter in what order the terms are multiplied.

Origins of the adjective ‘inanis’

Trying to draw a circle with nodes

How much caffeine would there be if I reuse tea leaves in a second brewing?

What can I use for input conversion instead of scanf?

Should I be charging for the social media versions of designs?



Simple image editor?


Is there a program like Microsoft Paint?Lightweight (graphical) image editorBasic Photo Editing tool suggestionsProgram like Windows Paint for cutting and copy edittingIs there something as simple and easy to use as Paint?Photo editing softwareTool comparable to Windows Paint that would run on LinuxFirst time Ubuntu user looking fir a basic image editing softwareUbuntu equivalent for Mspaint.exe?Simple image editor tool to draw a simple box/rectangle in an existing imageNeed an image editor with simple font selectionImage analysis softwareSimple editor with colored fontsImage manager (picasa like)Image editor with High-Pass equivalentlight weight image editor that can support pgm format in linuxWhat programs support PAM image format?Looking for a bitmap editor for screenshots






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty
margin-bottom:0;









215

















I want something similar to "preview" in macs. For example: I want an image editor that ONLY does simple adjustments like increase/decrease contrast, saturation, exposure, color tinting.... rotate, flip vertically, flip horizontally, make black and white, change size or format, crop.



THATS IT. I know gimp can do all those things but its a bit overkill. I just want to right click an image, open it with this magical program i just described, do a few quick adjustments, and then save and exit. Nothing really fancy.



Anyone know of anything like this? Btw I am using ubuntu 12.04 :) It rocks and I am glad I switched from mac, i just need to replace this one piece of software.










share|improve this question























  • 1





    This is a good recap of all this kind of software that are available under Ubuntu upubuntu.com/2011/03/…

    – user827992
    Jul 16 '12 at 23:27






  • 2





    I think gThamb is so simple to use and covers all my demands. It is like ACDSee on windows. Best indeed!

    – user271290
    Apr 20 '14 at 3:54






  • 1





    possible duplicate of Is there a program like Microsoft Paint?

    – αғsнιη
    Aug 17 '14 at 14:46






  • 2





    @KasiyA I would prefer to do it backwards. The other one dupe of this.

    – Lucio
    Aug 17 '14 at 21:28






  • 1





    @KasiyA Neither of these is a dupe of the other--this question is asking for an image editor that is mostly a viewer and stops short of offering drawing tools.

    – Eliah Kagan
    Aug 18 '14 at 0:24

















215

















I want something similar to "preview" in macs. For example: I want an image editor that ONLY does simple adjustments like increase/decrease contrast, saturation, exposure, color tinting.... rotate, flip vertically, flip horizontally, make black and white, change size or format, crop.



THATS IT. I know gimp can do all those things but its a bit overkill. I just want to right click an image, open it with this magical program i just described, do a few quick adjustments, and then save and exit. Nothing really fancy.



Anyone know of anything like this? Btw I am using ubuntu 12.04 :) It rocks and I am glad I switched from mac, i just need to replace this one piece of software.










share|improve this question























  • 1





    This is a good recap of all this kind of software that are available under Ubuntu upubuntu.com/2011/03/…

    – user827992
    Jul 16 '12 at 23:27






  • 2





    I think gThamb is so simple to use and covers all my demands. It is like ACDSee on windows. Best indeed!

    – user271290
    Apr 20 '14 at 3:54






  • 1





    possible duplicate of Is there a program like Microsoft Paint?

    – αғsнιη
    Aug 17 '14 at 14:46






  • 2





    @KasiyA I would prefer to do it backwards. The other one dupe of this.

    – Lucio
    Aug 17 '14 at 21:28






  • 1





    @KasiyA Neither of these is a dupe of the other--this question is asking for an image editor that is mostly a viewer and stops short of offering drawing tools.

    – Eliah Kagan
    Aug 18 '14 at 0:24













215












215








215


37






I want something similar to "preview" in macs. For example: I want an image editor that ONLY does simple adjustments like increase/decrease contrast, saturation, exposure, color tinting.... rotate, flip vertically, flip horizontally, make black and white, change size or format, crop.



THATS IT. I know gimp can do all those things but its a bit overkill. I just want to right click an image, open it with this magical program i just described, do a few quick adjustments, and then save and exit. Nothing really fancy.



Anyone know of anything like this? Btw I am using ubuntu 12.04 :) It rocks and I am glad I switched from mac, i just need to replace this one piece of software.










share|improve this question

















I want something similar to "preview" in macs. For example: I want an image editor that ONLY does simple adjustments like increase/decrease contrast, saturation, exposure, color tinting.... rotate, flip vertically, flip horizontally, make black and white, change size or format, crop.



THATS IT. I know gimp can do all those things but its a bit overkill. I just want to right click an image, open it with this magical program i just described, do a few quick adjustments, and then save and exit. Nothing really fancy.



Anyone know of anything like this? Btw I am using ubuntu 12.04 :) It rocks and I am glad I switched from mac, i just need to replace this one piece of software.







software-recommendation image-processing image-editor






share|improve this question
















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 17 '12 at 4:14









Jorge Castro

38.8k110 gold badges430 silver badges624 bronze badges




38.8k110 gold badges430 silver badges624 bronze badges










asked Jul 16 '12 at 23:22









mandymandy

1,0862 gold badges9 silver badges7 bronze badges




1,0862 gold badges9 silver badges7 bronze badges










  • 1





    This is a good recap of all this kind of software that are available under Ubuntu upubuntu.com/2011/03/…

    – user827992
    Jul 16 '12 at 23:27






  • 2





    I think gThamb is so simple to use and covers all my demands. It is like ACDSee on windows. Best indeed!

    – user271290
    Apr 20 '14 at 3:54






  • 1





    possible duplicate of Is there a program like Microsoft Paint?

    – αғsнιη
    Aug 17 '14 at 14:46






  • 2





    @KasiyA I would prefer to do it backwards. The other one dupe of this.

    – Lucio
    Aug 17 '14 at 21:28






  • 1





    @KasiyA Neither of these is a dupe of the other--this question is asking for an image editor that is mostly a viewer and stops short of offering drawing tools.

    – Eliah Kagan
    Aug 18 '14 at 0:24












  • 1





    This is a good recap of all this kind of software that are available under Ubuntu upubuntu.com/2011/03/…

    – user827992
    Jul 16 '12 at 23:27






  • 2





    I think gThamb is so simple to use and covers all my demands. It is like ACDSee on windows. Best indeed!

    – user271290
    Apr 20 '14 at 3:54






  • 1





    possible duplicate of Is there a program like Microsoft Paint?

    – αғsнιη
    Aug 17 '14 at 14:46






  • 2





    @KasiyA I would prefer to do it backwards. The other one dupe of this.

    – Lucio
    Aug 17 '14 at 21:28






  • 1





    @KasiyA Neither of these is a dupe of the other--this question is asking for an image editor that is mostly a viewer and stops short of offering drawing tools.

    – Eliah Kagan
    Aug 18 '14 at 0:24







1




1





This is a good recap of all this kind of software that are available under Ubuntu upubuntu.com/2011/03/…

– user827992
Jul 16 '12 at 23:27





This is a good recap of all this kind of software that are available under Ubuntu upubuntu.com/2011/03/…

– user827992
Jul 16 '12 at 23:27




2




2





I think gThamb is so simple to use and covers all my demands. It is like ACDSee on windows. Best indeed!

– user271290
Apr 20 '14 at 3:54





I think gThamb is so simple to use and covers all my demands. It is like ACDSee on windows. Best indeed!

– user271290
Apr 20 '14 at 3:54




1




1





possible duplicate of Is there a program like Microsoft Paint?

– αғsнιη
Aug 17 '14 at 14:46





possible duplicate of Is there a program like Microsoft Paint?

– αғsнιη
Aug 17 '14 at 14:46




2




2





@KasiyA I would prefer to do it backwards. The other one dupe of this.

– Lucio
Aug 17 '14 at 21:28





@KasiyA I would prefer to do it backwards. The other one dupe of this.

– Lucio
Aug 17 '14 at 21:28




1




1





@KasiyA Neither of these is a dupe of the other--this question is asking for an image editor that is mostly a viewer and stops short of offering drawing tools.

– Eliah Kagan
Aug 18 '14 at 0:24





@KasiyA Neither of these is a dupe of the other--this question is asking for an image editor that is mostly a viewer and stops short of offering drawing tools.

– Eliah Kagan
Aug 18 '14 at 0:24










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















197


















Pinta



A very simple image editor.



Pinta is a drawing/editing program modeled on Paint.NET. Its goal is to provide a simplified alternative to the GIMP for casual users.



Features



Its features include:



  • Adjustments (Auto level, Black and White, Sepia, …)

  • Effects (Motion blur, Glow, Warp, …)

  • Multiple layers

  • Unlimited undo/redo

  • Drawing tools (Paintbrush, Pencil, Shapes, …)

See the website for the full list.



Another feature of Pinta is full history saving. Say you want to continue a work later on, keeping all the layers intact (so that you can add/remove them later on), you can save the file in .ora format. It preserves every edit you have made so that you can reverse the changes.



Installation



For Ubuntu versions up to 12.04 you need to add a PPA to install this and keep it updated:




  • Ubuntu 10.10, 11.04 & 11.10



    sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable/ubuntu
    sudo apt-get update



  • Ubuntu 12.04



    sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable
    sudo apt-get update


Installing via the Terminal



Run this command:



sudo apt-get install pinta


Installing via the Ubuntu Software Center



  • Launch the Ubuntu Software Center

  • Search for "pinta"

  • Click the 'Install' button

Once it is installed you can now use Pinta. Navigate to: Menu > Graphics > Pinta



Screenshots



screenshot including "Adjustments" menu



screenshot including "Effects" menu



sample image with drawings on top of it






share|improve this answer























  • 2





    I have found Pinta's "Crop" function not to work. I select a region of a jpg photo, and the "Crop selection" produces about half the selected area. No idea why.

    – Carl Witthoft
    Aug 8 '15 at 20:58






  • 2





    pinta is nice, but all those mono dependencies... Shotwell comes with Ubuntu and has a working cropping function, but not much more

    – Alecz
    Jun 15 '17 at 13:31






  • 5





    Pinta is buggy software.

    – niry
    Jan 19 '18 at 0:58






  • 5





    In 2016 I think this was the answer, but not anymore. Pinta is not getting new releases and is unusable in on a 4k computer. It's also very buggy.

    – Bufke
    Feb 8 '18 at 20:59






  • 4





    Pinta is shit, and I say it because I love Paint.NET which is an archetype for Pinta. It leaves artifacts on screen, does not refresh minimap (layers) properly, does not refresh recently open files submenu. I could go on like this, don't use it or you will get into frustration fast. All bugs I found I got on Debian 9 running Pinta in KDE Plasma.

    – Marecky
    Mar 12 '18 at 20:52


















56


















Shotwell has a single photo view that allows you to do most if not all of what you're asking. Shotwell, of course, has the advantage that it's included by default in modern Ubuntu so there's nothing to install.



To access the Shotwell viewer without separately launching the main Shotwell app, right click the photo and from the Open With menu select Shotwell Photo Viewer:



Right click, Open With -> Shotwell Photo Viewer



(You can make the Shotwell viewer the default program to open photos by selecting Properties from the right click menu and messing around in the Open With tab there.)



From the Shotwell viewer, you can rotate, crop, manipulate color levels, etc., and simply save the file when you're done. You can see the tools at the bottom of the window here:



Shotwell Photo Viewer



Whereas usually Shotwell is nondestructive (in the sense that any manipulations you perform on photos are only saved to a photo file if you export it), hitting save from the viewer does indeed write the changes to the file.



Full disclosure: I work at Yorba, though not on Shotwell.






share|improve this answer























  • 6





    One thing you can't seem to do with shotwell is resize images, which seems like a rather glaring omission IMHO.

    – Martin Tournoij
    Oct 21 '15 at 14:37






  • 2





    I've used Shotwell extensively, and I think its crap. Doesn't even properly rotate images to even be recognized by other image softwares

    – KhoPhi
    Nov 16 '15 at 14:40






  • 1





    @Rexford, you may just be hitting bugs in your other image software. Shotwell properly handles the EXIF rotation field, and uses it instead of any pixel/buffer manipulation when rotating.

    – chazomaticus
    Jun 3 '16 at 4:40











  • Ubuntu installation: $ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yg-jensge/shotwell $ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install shotwell

    – 88mary256
    Dec 20 '16 at 22:13







  • 1





    Shotwell can't remove/blur/color a portion of the image

    – Anwar
    Dec 16 '17 at 8:29


















19


















I would try Pinta (it's in the repos), as it is simple and has all the necessary basic adjustments to do with contrast, brightness, etc, and even has layers functionality. It is ideal for a quick crop, resize or red eye correction. The version in the repos is 1.1, but you can use a ppa from the developers if you want to have a more recent version-see the notes on the site about whether to use the ppa or not. However, the default version is fine and is very useful for those quick corrections. As you can see in the screenshot below the interface is easy to navigate and simple and intuitive to use.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer




























  • doesn't even open pgm files....

    – Mehdi
    Jan 29 '16 at 13:04











  • Pinta works well for me. Crops, rectangle selects, blurs.

    – pwned
    Oct 7 '18 at 7:45


















14


















You might like gThumb. It can do all that you mentioned and little else.






share|improve this answer























  • 1





    This should be the accepted answer, by far.

    – niry
    Jan 19 '18 at 1:09


















12


















GThumb



GThumb is a really nice image viewer with basic editing tools such as:



  • Crop

  • Rotate

  • Equalize

  • Change Contrast

  • Change Focus

  • Change Colors

  • Apply basic effects (Grayscale, Negative, etc.)


Installation:



sudo apt-get install -y gthumb



Screenshots:



Screenshot 1Screenshot 2



Click to view them in high quality






share|improve this answer

































    4


















    I was just looking for something similar. I've found some candidates on Wikipedia, and I'm about to check some out.



    A few I've found so far are: Shotwell, fotoxx, and the already-mentioned gthumb. I don't know yet which ones are in the Ubuntu repository.



    EDIT: I have been using Shotwell now for a long time, and find that it does most of what I want, very quickly and easily. When it doesn't, it can directly open a full editor such as GIMP quickly to do the job instead.



    I especially like that it can easily resize images, something I do a lot.






    share|improve this answer























    • 1





      pinta throws 'unhandled exception' on 14.04 when trying to crop image. :) Shutter just halts the whole system. Only button hard reset helps. Only Shotwell works for me. Shutter was extremly cool.

      – Sergey
      Jul 25 '15 at 20:51











    • @Sergey: I'm still using shotwell after all these years, and if I need more, I use gimp. I'm pretty familiar with gimp now, so even though it's overkill, I like it because it does just about everything.

      – Marty Fried
      Jul 25 '15 at 21:43










    protected by Community Apr 20 '14 at 6:43



    Thank you for your interest in this question.
    Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



    Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














    6 Answers
    6






    active

    oldest

    votes








    6 Answers
    6






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    197


















    Pinta



    A very simple image editor.



    Pinta is a drawing/editing program modeled on Paint.NET. Its goal is to provide a simplified alternative to the GIMP for casual users.



    Features



    Its features include:



    • Adjustments (Auto level, Black and White, Sepia, …)

    • Effects (Motion blur, Glow, Warp, …)

    • Multiple layers

    • Unlimited undo/redo

    • Drawing tools (Paintbrush, Pencil, Shapes, …)

    See the website for the full list.



    Another feature of Pinta is full history saving. Say you want to continue a work later on, keeping all the layers intact (so that you can add/remove them later on), you can save the file in .ora format. It preserves every edit you have made so that you can reverse the changes.



    Installation



    For Ubuntu versions up to 12.04 you need to add a PPA to install this and keep it updated:




    • Ubuntu 10.10, 11.04 & 11.10



      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable/ubuntu
      sudo apt-get update



    • Ubuntu 12.04



      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable
      sudo apt-get update


    Installing via the Terminal



    Run this command:



    sudo apt-get install pinta


    Installing via the Ubuntu Software Center



    • Launch the Ubuntu Software Center

    • Search for "pinta"

    • Click the 'Install' button

    Once it is installed you can now use Pinta. Navigate to: Menu > Graphics > Pinta



    Screenshots



    screenshot including "Adjustments" menu



    screenshot including "Effects" menu



    sample image with drawings on top of it






    share|improve this answer























    • 2





      I have found Pinta's "Crop" function not to work. I select a region of a jpg photo, and the "Crop selection" produces about half the selected area. No idea why.

      – Carl Witthoft
      Aug 8 '15 at 20:58






    • 2





      pinta is nice, but all those mono dependencies... Shotwell comes with Ubuntu and has a working cropping function, but not much more

      – Alecz
      Jun 15 '17 at 13:31






    • 5





      Pinta is buggy software.

      – niry
      Jan 19 '18 at 0:58






    • 5





      In 2016 I think this was the answer, but not anymore. Pinta is not getting new releases and is unusable in on a 4k computer. It's also very buggy.

      – Bufke
      Feb 8 '18 at 20:59






    • 4





      Pinta is shit, and I say it because I love Paint.NET which is an archetype for Pinta. It leaves artifacts on screen, does not refresh minimap (layers) properly, does not refresh recently open files submenu. I could go on like this, don't use it or you will get into frustration fast. All bugs I found I got on Debian 9 running Pinta in KDE Plasma.

      – Marecky
      Mar 12 '18 at 20:52















    197


















    Pinta



    A very simple image editor.



    Pinta is a drawing/editing program modeled on Paint.NET. Its goal is to provide a simplified alternative to the GIMP for casual users.



    Features



    Its features include:



    • Adjustments (Auto level, Black and White, Sepia, …)

    • Effects (Motion blur, Glow, Warp, …)

    • Multiple layers

    • Unlimited undo/redo

    • Drawing tools (Paintbrush, Pencil, Shapes, …)

    See the website for the full list.



    Another feature of Pinta is full history saving. Say you want to continue a work later on, keeping all the layers intact (so that you can add/remove them later on), you can save the file in .ora format. It preserves every edit you have made so that you can reverse the changes.



    Installation



    For Ubuntu versions up to 12.04 you need to add a PPA to install this and keep it updated:




    • Ubuntu 10.10, 11.04 & 11.10



      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable/ubuntu
      sudo apt-get update



    • Ubuntu 12.04



      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable
      sudo apt-get update


    Installing via the Terminal



    Run this command:



    sudo apt-get install pinta


    Installing via the Ubuntu Software Center



    • Launch the Ubuntu Software Center

    • Search for "pinta"

    • Click the 'Install' button

    Once it is installed you can now use Pinta. Navigate to: Menu > Graphics > Pinta



    Screenshots



    screenshot including "Adjustments" menu



    screenshot including "Effects" menu



    sample image with drawings on top of it






    share|improve this answer























    • 2





      I have found Pinta's "Crop" function not to work. I select a region of a jpg photo, and the "Crop selection" produces about half the selected area. No idea why.

      – Carl Witthoft
      Aug 8 '15 at 20:58






    • 2





      pinta is nice, but all those mono dependencies... Shotwell comes with Ubuntu and has a working cropping function, but not much more

      – Alecz
      Jun 15 '17 at 13:31






    • 5





      Pinta is buggy software.

      – niry
      Jan 19 '18 at 0:58






    • 5





      In 2016 I think this was the answer, but not anymore. Pinta is not getting new releases and is unusable in on a 4k computer. It's also very buggy.

      – Bufke
      Feb 8 '18 at 20:59






    • 4





      Pinta is shit, and I say it because I love Paint.NET which is an archetype for Pinta. It leaves artifacts on screen, does not refresh minimap (layers) properly, does not refresh recently open files submenu. I could go on like this, don't use it or you will get into frustration fast. All bugs I found I got on Debian 9 running Pinta in KDE Plasma.

      – Marecky
      Mar 12 '18 at 20:52













    197














    197










    197









    Pinta



    A very simple image editor.



    Pinta is a drawing/editing program modeled on Paint.NET. Its goal is to provide a simplified alternative to the GIMP for casual users.



    Features



    Its features include:



    • Adjustments (Auto level, Black and White, Sepia, …)

    • Effects (Motion blur, Glow, Warp, …)

    • Multiple layers

    • Unlimited undo/redo

    • Drawing tools (Paintbrush, Pencil, Shapes, …)

    See the website for the full list.



    Another feature of Pinta is full history saving. Say you want to continue a work later on, keeping all the layers intact (so that you can add/remove them later on), you can save the file in .ora format. It preserves every edit you have made so that you can reverse the changes.



    Installation



    For Ubuntu versions up to 12.04 you need to add a PPA to install this and keep it updated:




    • Ubuntu 10.10, 11.04 & 11.10



      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable/ubuntu
      sudo apt-get update



    • Ubuntu 12.04



      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable
      sudo apt-get update


    Installing via the Terminal



    Run this command:



    sudo apt-get install pinta


    Installing via the Ubuntu Software Center



    • Launch the Ubuntu Software Center

    • Search for "pinta"

    • Click the 'Install' button

    Once it is installed you can now use Pinta. Navigate to: Menu > Graphics > Pinta



    Screenshots



    screenshot including "Adjustments" menu



    screenshot including "Effects" menu



    sample image with drawings on top of it






    share|improve this answer
















    Pinta



    A very simple image editor.



    Pinta is a drawing/editing program modeled on Paint.NET. Its goal is to provide a simplified alternative to the GIMP for casual users.



    Features



    Its features include:



    • Adjustments (Auto level, Black and White, Sepia, …)

    • Effects (Motion blur, Glow, Warp, …)

    • Multiple layers

    • Unlimited undo/redo

    • Drawing tools (Paintbrush, Pencil, Shapes, …)

    See the website for the full list.



    Another feature of Pinta is full history saving. Say you want to continue a work later on, keeping all the layers intact (so that you can add/remove them later on), you can save the file in .ora format. It preserves every edit you have made so that you can reverse the changes.



    Installation



    For Ubuntu versions up to 12.04 you need to add a PPA to install this and keep it updated:




    • Ubuntu 10.10, 11.04 & 11.10



      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable/ubuntu
      sudo apt-get update



    • Ubuntu 12.04



      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable
      sudo apt-get update


    Installing via the Terminal



    Run this command:



    sudo apt-get install pinta


    Installing via the Ubuntu Software Center



    • Launch the Ubuntu Software Center

    • Search for "pinta"

    • Click the 'Install' button

    Once it is installed you can now use Pinta. Navigate to: Menu > Graphics > Pinta



    Screenshots



    screenshot including "Adjustments" menu



    screenshot including "Effects" menu



    sample image with drawings on top of it







    share|improve this answer















    share|improve this answer




    share|improve this answer








    edited May 30 at 2:33









    wjandrea

    10.3k4 gold badges33 silver badges70 bronze badges




    10.3k4 gold badges33 silver badges70 bronze badges










    answered Jul 17 '12 at 7:28









    AshuAshu

    7,2493 gold badges30 silver badges57 bronze badges




    7,2493 gold badges30 silver badges57 bronze badges










    • 2





      I have found Pinta's "Crop" function not to work. I select a region of a jpg photo, and the "Crop selection" produces about half the selected area. No idea why.

      – Carl Witthoft
      Aug 8 '15 at 20:58






    • 2





      pinta is nice, but all those mono dependencies... Shotwell comes with Ubuntu and has a working cropping function, but not much more

      – Alecz
      Jun 15 '17 at 13:31






    • 5





      Pinta is buggy software.

      – niry
      Jan 19 '18 at 0:58






    • 5





      In 2016 I think this was the answer, but not anymore. Pinta is not getting new releases and is unusable in on a 4k computer. It's also very buggy.

      – Bufke
      Feb 8 '18 at 20:59






    • 4





      Pinta is shit, and I say it because I love Paint.NET which is an archetype for Pinta. It leaves artifacts on screen, does not refresh minimap (layers) properly, does not refresh recently open files submenu. I could go on like this, don't use it or you will get into frustration fast. All bugs I found I got on Debian 9 running Pinta in KDE Plasma.

      – Marecky
      Mar 12 '18 at 20:52












    • 2





      I have found Pinta's "Crop" function not to work. I select a region of a jpg photo, and the "Crop selection" produces about half the selected area. No idea why.

      – Carl Witthoft
      Aug 8 '15 at 20:58






    • 2





      pinta is nice, but all those mono dependencies... Shotwell comes with Ubuntu and has a working cropping function, but not much more

      – Alecz
      Jun 15 '17 at 13:31






    • 5





      Pinta is buggy software.

      – niry
      Jan 19 '18 at 0:58






    • 5





      In 2016 I think this was the answer, but not anymore. Pinta is not getting new releases and is unusable in on a 4k computer. It's also very buggy.

      – Bufke
      Feb 8 '18 at 20:59






    • 4





      Pinta is shit, and I say it because I love Paint.NET which is an archetype for Pinta. It leaves artifacts on screen, does not refresh minimap (layers) properly, does not refresh recently open files submenu. I could go on like this, don't use it or you will get into frustration fast. All bugs I found I got on Debian 9 running Pinta in KDE Plasma.

      – Marecky
      Mar 12 '18 at 20:52







    2




    2





    I have found Pinta's "Crop" function not to work. I select a region of a jpg photo, and the "Crop selection" produces about half the selected area. No idea why.

    – Carl Witthoft
    Aug 8 '15 at 20:58





    I have found Pinta's "Crop" function not to work. I select a region of a jpg photo, and the "Crop selection" produces about half the selected area. No idea why.

    – Carl Witthoft
    Aug 8 '15 at 20:58




    2




    2





    pinta is nice, but all those mono dependencies... Shotwell comes with Ubuntu and has a working cropping function, but not much more

    – Alecz
    Jun 15 '17 at 13:31





    pinta is nice, but all those mono dependencies... Shotwell comes with Ubuntu and has a working cropping function, but not much more

    – Alecz
    Jun 15 '17 at 13:31




    5




    5





    Pinta is buggy software.

    – niry
    Jan 19 '18 at 0:58





    Pinta is buggy software.

    – niry
    Jan 19 '18 at 0:58




    5




    5





    In 2016 I think this was the answer, but not anymore. Pinta is not getting new releases and is unusable in on a 4k computer. It's also very buggy.

    – Bufke
    Feb 8 '18 at 20:59





    In 2016 I think this was the answer, but not anymore. Pinta is not getting new releases and is unusable in on a 4k computer. It's also very buggy.

    – Bufke
    Feb 8 '18 at 20:59




    4




    4





    Pinta is shit, and I say it because I love Paint.NET which is an archetype for Pinta. It leaves artifacts on screen, does not refresh minimap (layers) properly, does not refresh recently open files submenu. I could go on like this, don't use it or you will get into frustration fast. All bugs I found I got on Debian 9 running Pinta in KDE Plasma.

    – Marecky
    Mar 12 '18 at 20:52





    Pinta is shit, and I say it because I love Paint.NET which is an archetype for Pinta. It leaves artifacts on screen, does not refresh minimap (layers) properly, does not refresh recently open files submenu. I could go on like this, don't use it or you will get into frustration fast. All bugs I found I got on Debian 9 running Pinta in KDE Plasma.

    – Marecky
    Mar 12 '18 at 20:52













    56


















    Shotwell has a single photo view that allows you to do most if not all of what you're asking. Shotwell, of course, has the advantage that it's included by default in modern Ubuntu so there's nothing to install.



    To access the Shotwell viewer without separately launching the main Shotwell app, right click the photo and from the Open With menu select Shotwell Photo Viewer:



    Right click, Open With -> Shotwell Photo Viewer



    (You can make the Shotwell viewer the default program to open photos by selecting Properties from the right click menu and messing around in the Open With tab there.)



    From the Shotwell viewer, you can rotate, crop, manipulate color levels, etc., and simply save the file when you're done. You can see the tools at the bottom of the window here:



    Shotwell Photo Viewer



    Whereas usually Shotwell is nondestructive (in the sense that any manipulations you perform on photos are only saved to a photo file if you export it), hitting save from the viewer does indeed write the changes to the file.



    Full disclosure: I work at Yorba, though not on Shotwell.






    share|improve this answer























    • 6





      One thing you can't seem to do with shotwell is resize images, which seems like a rather glaring omission IMHO.

      – Martin Tournoij
      Oct 21 '15 at 14:37






    • 2





      I've used Shotwell extensively, and I think its crap. Doesn't even properly rotate images to even be recognized by other image softwares

      – KhoPhi
      Nov 16 '15 at 14:40






    • 1





      @Rexford, you may just be hitting bugs in your other image software. Shotwell properly handles the EXIF rotation field, and uses it instead of any pixel/buffer manipulation when rotating.

      – chazomaticus
      Jun 3 '16 at 4:40











    • Ubuntu installation: $ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yg-jensge/shotwell $ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install shotwell

      – 88mary256
      Dec 20 '16 at 22:13







    • 1





      Shotwell can't remove/blur/color a portion of the image

      – Anwar
      Dec 16 '17 at 8:29















    56


















    Shotwell has a single photo view that allows you to do most if not all of what you're asking. Shotwell, of course, has the advantage that it's included by default in modern Ubuntu so there's nothing to install.



    To access the Shotwell viewer without separately launching the main Shotwell app, right click the photo and from the Open With menu select Shotwell Photo Viewer:



    Right click, Open With -> Shotwell Photo Viewer



    (You can make the Shotwell viewer the default program to open photos by selecting Properties from the right click menu and messing around in the Open With tab there.)



    From the Shotwell viewer, you can rotate, crop, manipulate color levels, etc., and simply save the file when you're done. You can see the tools at the bottom of the window here:



    Shotwell Photo Viewer



    Whereas usually Shotwell is nondestructive (in the sense that any manipulations you perform on photos are only saved to a photo file if you export it), hitting save from the viewer does indeed write the changes to the file.



    Full disclosure: I work at Yorba, though not on Shotwell.






    share|improve this answer























    • 6





      One thing you can't seem to do with shotwell is resize images, which seems like a rather glaring omission IMHO.

      – Martin Tournoij
      Oct 21 '15 at 14:37






    • 2





      I've used Shotwell extensively, and I think its crap. Doesn't even properly rotate images to even be recognized by other image softwares

      – KhoPhi
      Nov 16 '15 at 14:40






    • 1





      @Rexford, you may just be hitting bugs in your other image software. Shotwell properly handles the EXIF rotation field, and uses it instead of any pixel/buffer manipulation when rotating.

      – chazomaticus
      Jun 3 '16 at 4:40











    • Ubuntu installation: $ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yg-jensge/shotwell $ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install shotwell

      – 88mary256
      Dec 20 '16 at 22:13







    • 1





      Shotwell can't remove/blur/color a portion of the image

      – Anwar
      Dec 16 '17 at 8:29













    56














    56










    56









    Shotwell has a single photo view that allows you to do most if not all of what you're asking. Shotwell, of course, has the advantage that it's included by default in modern Ubuntu so there's nothing to install.



    To access the Shotwell viewer without separately launching the main Shotwell app, right click the photo and from the Open With menu select Shotwell Photo Viewer:



    Right click, Open With -> Shotwell Photo Viewer



    (You can make the Shotwell viewer the default program to open photos by selecting Properties from the right click menu and messing around in the Open With tab there.)



    From the Shotwell viewer, you can rotate, crop, manipulate color levels, etc., and simply save the file when you're done. You can see the tools at the bottom of the window here:



    Shotwell Photo Viewer



    Whereas usually Shotwell is nondestructive (in the sense that any manipulations you perform on photos are only saved to a photo file if you export it), hitting save from the viewer does indeed write the changes to the file.



    Full disclosure: I work at Yorba, though not on Shotwell.






    share|improve this answer
















    Shotwell has a single photo view that allows you to do most if not all of what you're asking. Shotwell, of course, has the advantage that it's included by default in modern Ubuntu so there's nothing to install.



    To access the Shotwell viewer without separately launching the main Shotwell app, right click the photo and from the Open With menu select Shotwell Photo Viewer:



    Right click, Open With -> Shotwell Photo Viewer



    (You can make the Shotwell viewer the default program to open photos by selecting Properties from the right click menu and messing around in the Open With tab there.)



    From the Shotwell viewer, you can rotate, crop, manipulate color levels, etc., and simply save the file when you're done. You can see the tools at the bottom of the window here:



    Shotwell Photo Viewer



    Whereas usually Shotwell is nondestructive (in the sense that any manipulations you perform on photos are only saved to a photo file if you export it), hitting save from the viewer does indeed write the changes to the file.



    Full disclosure: I work at Yorba, though not on Shotwell.







    share|improve this answer















    share|improve this answer




    share|improve this answer








    edited Oct 20 '14 at 19:16









    αғsнιη

    26.1k23 gold badges105 silver badges168 bronze badges




    26.1k23 gold badges105 silver badges168 bronze badges










    answered Jul 17 '12 at 0:24









    chazomaticuschazomaticus

    7993 gold badges7 silver badges18 bronze badges




    7993 gold badges7 silver badges18 bronze badges










    • 6





      One thing you can't seem to do with shotwell is resize images, which seems like a rather glaring omission IMHO.

      – Martin Tournoij
      Oct 21 '15 at 14:37






    • 2





      I've used Shotwell extensively, and I think its crap. Doesn't even properly rotate images to even be recognized by other image softwares

      – KhoPhi
      Nov 16 '15 at 14:40






    • 1





      @Rexford, you may just be hitting bugs in your other image software. Shotwell properly handles the EXIF rotation field, and uses it instead of any pixel/buffer manipulation when rotating.

      – chazomaticus
      Jun 3 '16 at 4:40











    • Ubuntu installation: $ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yg-jensge/shotwell $ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install shotwell

      – 88mary256
      Dec 20 '16 at 22:13







    • 1





      Shotwell can't remove/blur/color a portion of the image

      – Anwar
      Dec 16 '17 at 8:29












    • 6





      One thing you can't seem to do with shotwell is resize images, which seems like a rather glaring omission IMHO.

      – Martin Tournoij
      Oct 21 '15 at 14:37






    • 2





      I've used Shotwell extensively, and I think its crap. Doesn't even properly rotate images to even be recognized by other image softwares

      – KhoPhi
      Nov 16 '15 at 14:40






    • 1





      @Rexford, you may just be hitting bugs in your other image software. Shotwell properly handles the EXIF rotation field, and uses it instead of any pixel/buffer manipulation when rotating.

      – chazomaticus
      Jun 3 '16 at 4:40











    • Ubuntu installation: $ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yg-jensge/shotwell $ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install shotwell

      – 88mary256
      Dec 20 '16 at 22:13







    • 1





      Shotwell can't remove/blur/color a portion of the image

      – Anwar
      Dec 16 '17 at 8:29







    6




    6





    One thing you can't seem to do with shotwell is resize images, which seems like a rather glaring omission IMHO.

    – Martin Tournoij
    Oct 21 '15 at 14:37





    One thing you can't seem to do with shotwell is resize images, which seems like a rather glaring omission IMHO.

    – Martin Tournoij
    Oct 21 '15 at 14:37




    2




    2





    I've used Shotwell extensively, and I think its crap. Doesn't even properly rotate images to even be recognized by other image softwares

    – KhoPhi
    Nov 16 '15 at 14:40





    I've used Shotwell extensively, and I think its crap. Doesn't even properly rotate images to even be recognized by other image softwares

    – KhoPhi
    Nov 16 '15 at 14:40




    1




    1





    @Rexford, you may just be hitting bugs in your other image software. Shotwell properly handles the EXIF rotation field, and uses it instead of any pixel/buffer manipulation when rotating.

    – chazomaticus
    Jun 3 '16 at 4:40





    @Rexford, you may just be hitting bugs in your other image software. Shotwell properly handles the EXIF rotation field, and uses it instead of any pixel/buffer manipulation when rotating.

    – chazomaticus
    Jun 3 '16 at 4:40













    Ubuntu installation: $ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yg-jensge/shotwell $ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install shotwell

    – 88mary256
    Dec 20 '16 at 22:13






    Ubuntu installation: $ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yg-jensge/shotwell $ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install shotwell

    – 88mary256
    Dec 20 '16 at 22:13





    1




    1





    Shotwell can't remove/blur/color a portion of the image

    – Anwar
    Dec 16 '17 at 8:29





    Shotwell can't remove/blur/color a portion of the image

    – Anwar
    Dec 16 '17 at 8:29











    19


















    I would try Pinta (it's in the repos), as it is simple and has all the necessary basic adjustments to do with contrast, brightness, etc, and even has layers functionality. It is ideal for a quick crop, resize or red eye correction. The version in the repos is 1.1, but you can use a ppa from the developers if you want to have a more recent version-see the notes on the site about whether to use the ppa or not. However, the default version is fine and is very useful for those quick corrections. As you can see in the screenshot below the interface is easy to navigate and simple and intuitive to use.



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer




























    • doesn't even open pgm files....

      – Mehdi
      Jan 29 '16 at 13:04











    • Pinta works well for me. Crops, rectangle selects, blurs.

      – pwned
      Oct 7 '18 at 7:45















    19


















    I would try Pinta (it's in the repos), as it is simple and has all the necessary basic adjustments to do with contrast, brightness, etc, and even has layers functionality. It is ideal for a quick crop, resize or red eye correction. The version in the repos is 1.1, but you can use a ppa from the developers if you want to have a more recent version-see the notes on the site about whether to use the ppa or not. However, the default version is fine and is very useful for those quick corrections. As you can see in the screenshot below the interface is easy to navigate and simple and intuitive to use.



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer




























    • doesn't even open pgm files....

      – Mehdi
      Jan 29 '16 at 13:04











    • Pinta works well for me. Crops, rectangle selects, blurs.

      – pwned
      Oct 7 '18 at 7:45













    19














    19










    19









    I would try Pinta (it's in the repos), as it is simple and has all the necessary basic adjustments to do with contrast, brightness, etc, and even has layers functionality. It is ideal for a quick crop, resize or red eye correction. The version in the repos is 1.1, but you can use a ppa from the developers if you want to have a more recent version-see the notes on the site about whether to use the ppa or not. However, the default version is fine and is very useful for those quick corrections. As you can see in the screenshot below the interface is easy to navigate and simple and intuitive to use.



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer
















    I would try Pinta (it's in the repos), as it is simple and has all the necessary basic adjustments to do with contrast, brightness, etc, and even has layers functionality. It is ideal for a quick crop, resize or red eye correction. The version in the repos is 1.1, but you can use a ppa from the developers if you want to have a more recent version-see the notes on the site about whether to use the ppa or not. However, the default version is fine and is very useful for those quick corrections. As you can see in the screenshot below the interface is easy to navigate and simple and intuitive to use.



    enter image description here







    share|improve this answer















    share|improve this answer




    share|improve this answer








    edited Jul 30 '12 at 10:11

























    answered Jul 17 '12 at 0:25







    user76204user76204






















    • doesn't even open pgm files....

      – Mehdi
      Jan 29 '16 at 13:04











    • Pinta works well for me. Crops, rectangle selects, blurs.

      – pwned
      Oct 7 '18 at 7:45

















    • doesn't even open pgm files....

      – Mehdi
      Jan 29 '16 at 13:04











    • Pinta works well for me. Crops, rectangle selects, blurs.

      – pwned
      Oct 7 '18 at 7:45
















    doesn't even open pgm files....

    – Mehdi
    Jan 29 '16 at 13:04





    doesn't even open pgm files....

    – Mehdi
    Jan 29 '16 at 13:04













    Pinta works well for me. Crops, rectangle selects, blurs.

    – pwned
    Oct 7 '18 at 7:45





    Pinta works well for me. Crops, rectangle selects, blurs.

    – pwned
    Oct 7 '18 at 7:45











    14


















    You might like gThumb. It can do all that you mentioned and little else.






    share|improve this answer























    • 1





      This should be the accepted answer, by far.

      – niry
      Jan 19 '18 at 1:09















    14


















    You might like gThumb. It can do all that you mentioned and little else.






    share|improve this answer























    • 1





      This should be the accepted answer, by far.

      – niry
      Jan 19 '18 at 1:09













    14














    14










    14









    You might like gThumb. It can do all that you mentioned and little else.






    share|improve this answer
















    You might like gThumb. It can do all that you mentioned and little else.







    share|improve this answer















    share|improve this answer




    share|improve this answer








    edited Jul 17 '12 at 4:06









    Eliah Kagan

    91.2k23 gold badges251 silver badges400 bronze badges




    91.2k23 gold badges251 silver badges400 bronze badges










    answered Jul 16 '12 at 23:42









    xjonquilxxjonquilx

    7943 gold badges8 silver badges19 bronze badges




    7943 gold badges8 silver badges19 bronze badges










    • 1





      This should be the accepted answer, by far.

      – niry
      Jan 19 '18 at 1:09












    • 1





      This should be the accepted answer, by far.

      – niry
      Jan 19 '18 at 1:09







    1




    1





    This should be the accepted answer, by far.

    – niry
    Jan 19 '18 at 1:09





    This should be the accepted answer, by far.

    – niry
    Jan 19 '18 at 1:09











    12


















    GThumb



    GThumb is a really nice image viewer with basic editing tools such as:



    • Crop

    • Rotate

    • Equalize

    • Change Contrast

    • Change Focus

    • Change Colors

    • Apply basic effects (Grayscale, Negative, etc.)


    Installation:



    sudo apt-get install -y gthumb



    Screenshots:



    Screenshot 1Screenshot 2



    Click to view them in high quality






    share|improve this answer






























      12


















      GThumb



      GThumb is a really nice image viewer with basic editing tools such as:



      • Crop

      • Rotate

      • Equalize

      • Change Contrast

      • Change Focus

      • Change Colors

      • Apply basic effects (Grayscale, Negative, etc.)


      Installation:



      sudo apt-get install -y gthumb



      Screenshots:



      Screenshot 1Screenshot 2



      Click to view them in high quality






      share|improve this answer




























        12














        12










        12









        GThumb



        GThumb is a really nice image viewer with basic editing tools such as:



        • Crop

        • Rotate

        • Equalize

        • Change Contrast

        • Change Focus

        • Change Colors

        • Apply basic effects (Grayscale, Negative, etc.)


        Installation:



        sudo apt-get install -y gthumb



        Screenshots:



        Screenshot 1Screenshot 2



        Click to view them in high quality






        share|improve this answer














        GThumb



        GThumb is a really nice image viewer with basic editing tools such as:



        • Crop

        • Rotate

        • Equalize

        • Change Contrast

        • Change Focus

        • Change Colors

        • Apply basic effects (Grayscale, Negative, etc.)


        Installation:



        sudo apt-get install -y gthumb



        Screenshots:



        Screenshot 1Screenshot 2



        Click to view them in high quality







        share|improve this answer













        share|improve this answer




        share|improve this answer










        answered Oct 30 '16 at 21:54









        SheharyarSheharyar

        83310 silver badges18 bronze badges




        83310 silver badges18 bronze badges
























            4


















            I was just looking for something similar. I've found some candidates on Wikipedia, and I'm about to check some out.



            A few I've found so far are: Shotwell, fotoxx, and the already-mentioned gthumb. I don't know yet which ones are in the Ubuntu repository.



            EDIT: I have been using Shotwell now for a long time, and find that it does most of what I want, very quickly and easily. When it doesn't, it can directly open a full editor such as GIMP quickly to do the job instead.



            I especially like that it can easily resize images, something I do a lot.






            share|improve this answer























            • 1





              pinta throws 'unhandled exception' on 14.04 when trying to crop image. :) Shutter just halts the whole system. Only button hard reset helps. Only Shotwell works for me. Shutter was extremly cool.

              – Sergey
              Jul 25 '15 at 20:51











            • @Sergey: I'm still using shotwell after all these years, and if I need more, I use gimp. I'm pretty familiar with gimp now, so even though it's overkill, I like it because it does just about everything.

              – Marty Fried
              Jul 25 '15 at 21:43















            4


















            I was just looking for something similar. I've found some candidates on Wikipedia, and I'm about to check some out.



            A few I've found so far are: Shotwell, fotoxx, and the already-mentioned gthumb. I don't know yet which ones are in the Ubuntu repository.



            EDIT: I have been using Shotwell now for a long time, and find that it does most of what I want, very quickly and easily. When it doesn't, it can directly open a full editor such as GIMP quickly to do the job instead.



            I especially like that it can easily resize images, something I do a lot.






            share|improve this answer























            • 1





              pinta throws 'unhandled exception' on 14.04 when trying to crop image. :) Shutter just halts the whole system. Only button hard reset helps. Only Shotwell works for me. Shutter was extremly cool.

              – Sergey
              Jul 25 '15 at 20:51











            • @Sergey: I'm still using shotwell after all these years, and if I need more, I use gimp. I'm pretty familiar with gimp now, so even though it's overkill, I like it because it does just about everything.

              – Marty Fried
              Jul 25 '15 at 21:43













            4














            4










            4









            I was just looking for something similar. I've found some candidates on Wikipedia, and I'm about to check some out.



            A few I've found so far are: Shotwell, fotoxx, and the already-mentioned gthumb. I don't know yet which ones are in the Ubuntu repository.



            EDIT: I have been using Shotwell now for a long time, and find that it does most of what I want, very quickly and easily. When it doesn't, it can directly open a full editor such as GIMP quickly to do the job instead.



            I especially like that it can easily resize images, something I do a lot.






            share|improve this answer
















            I was just looking for something similar. I've found some candidates on Wikipedia, and I'm about to check some out.



            A few I've found so far are: Shotwell, fotoxx, and the already-mentioned gthumb. I don't know yet which ones are in the Ubuntu repository.



            EDIT: I have been using Shotwell now for a long time, and find that it does most of what I want, very quickly and easily. When it doesn't, it can directly open a full editor such as GIMP quickly to do the job instead.



            I especially like that it can easily resize images, something I do a lot.







            share|improve this answer















            share|improve this answer




            share|improve this answer








            edited Sep 6 '14 at 17:25

























            answered Jul 17 '12 at 0:13









            Marty FriedMarty Fried

            14.5k5 gold badges39 silver badges48 bronze badges




            14.5k5 gold badges39 silver badges48 bronze badges










            • 1





              pinta throws 'unhandled exception' on 14.04 when trying to crop image. :) Shutter just halts the whole system. Only button hard reset helps. Only Shotwell works for me. Shutter was extremly cool.

              – Sergey
              Jul 25 '15 at 20:51











            • @Sergey: I'm still using shotwell after all these years, and if I need more, I use gimp. I'm pretty familiar with gimp now, so even though it's overkill, I like it because it does just about everything.

              – Marty Fried
              Jul 25 '15 at 21:43












            • 1





              pinta throws 'unhandled exception' on 14.04 when trying to crop image. :) Shutter just halts the whole system. Only button hard reset helps. Only Shotwell works for me. Shutter was extremly cool.

              – Sergey
              Jul 25 '15 at 20:51











            • @Sergey: I'm still using shotwell after all these years, and if I need more, I use gimp. I'm pretty familiar with gimp now, so even though it's overkill, I like it because it does just about everything.

              – Marty Fried
              Jul 25 '15 at 21:43







            1




            1





            pinta throws 'unhandled exception' on 14.04 when trying to crop image. :) Shutter just halts the whole system. Only button hard reset helps. Only Shotwell works for me. Shutter was extremly cool.

            – Sergey
            Jul 25 '15 at 20:51





            pinta throws 'unhandled exception' on 14.04 when trying to crop image. :) Shutter just halts the whole system. Only button hard reset helps. Only Shotwell works for me. Shutter was extremly cool.

            – Sergey
            Jul 25 '15 at 20:51













            @Sergey: I'm still using shotwell after all these years, and if I need more, I use gimp. I'm pretty familiar with gimp now, so even though it's overkill, I like it because it does just about everything.

            – Marty Fried
            Jul 25 '15 at 21:43





            @Sergey: I'm still using shotwell after all these years, and if I need more, I use gimp. I'm pretty familiar with gimp now, so even though it's overkill, I like it because it does just about everything.

            – Marty Fried
            Jul 25 '15 at 21:43





            protected by Community Apr 20 '14 at 6:43



            Thank you for your interest in this question.
            Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



            Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



            Popular posts from this blog

            Tamil (spriik) Luke uk diar | Nawigatjuun

            Align equal signs while including text over equalitiesAMS align: left aligned text/math plus multicolumn alignmentMultiple alignmentsAligning equations in multiple placesNumbering and aligning an equation with multiple columnsHow to align one equation with another multline equationUsing \ in environments inside the begintabularxNumber equations and preserving alignment of equal signsHow can I align equations to the left and to the right?Double equation alignment problem within align enviromentAligned within align: Why are they right-aligned?

            Where does the image of a data connector as a sharp metal spike originate from?Where does the concept of infected people turning into zombies only after death originate from?Where does the motif of a reanimated human head originate?Where did the notion that Dragons could speak originate?Where does the archetypal image of the 'Grey' alien come from?Where did the suffix '-Man' originate?Where does the notion of being injured or killed by an illusion originate?Where did the term “sophont” originate?Where does the trope of magic spells being driven by advanced technology originate from?Where did the term “the living impaired” originate?