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Chiappetta793

: Alternative to Photoshop's Stamp filter in GIMP In Photoshop using Filter > Sketch > Stamp you can create an effect similar to the image below: Is there any plugin or any way to do this

@Chiappetta793

Posted in: #Filter #Gimp #ImageEditing

In Photoshop using Filter > Sketch > Stamp you can create an effect similar to the image below:



Is there any plugin or any way to do this in GIMP?

P.S: in GIMP Color > Desaturate is not helping.

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@Samaraweera207

Try the G'MIC plugin for GIMP - it has a Stamp filter. Once you've installed G'MIC and restarted GIMP, find it at Filters > G'MIC > expand the Black and White filters, the Stamp filter is in the list.

It's not exactly the same, but quite close. I suppose you could add another filter first to get a bit more edge defintion before applying the Stamp filter. Anyway, this example is just the plain ordinary Stamp filter from G'MIC.



Here's another attempt where I ran the regular GIMP Cartoon filter a couple of times before applying the G'MIC Stamp filter.

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@Bryan765

Use Gimp's "photocopy" filter, and move all the sliders completely to the right. That is as close as you are going to get to the Photoshop "stamp" filter.

Mark

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@Chiappetta793

This is the best I could get using GIMP (without any plugin):



First I applied Filter > Artistic > Photocopy, then applied contrast-brightness two times...

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@Debbie163

From the experience I've had with GIMP, you can't achieve the same look... However I would suggest that you play around with the contrast. I would also suggest de-saturizing the image first, and then play around with the contrast to see how much or how little you want. You can find it under Colours > Brightness-Contrast.
If you put the contrast way up, there's only a small amount of colour which shines through - that's why you should de-saturate first, as well. It'll give you only the shades (graytones), or will turn completely white and black in the end...
Hope that helped!

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@Gail6891361

Maybe Filters > Edge-detect > Difference of Gaussians... could give a similar effect. Maybe with some added Filters > Noise. There are probably better ways to do this. Didn't have time to investigate further though. G'Mic filter addon surely has something for this too.

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