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Re: photoshop style layering

Posted by Glen MacDonald-2 on May 13, 2009; 11:02pm
URL: http://imagej.273.s1.nabble.com/photoshop-style-layering-tp3692542p3692546.html

Adobe Elements is a fraction of the price for Photoshop and provides  
the important components for scientific use, like layers and adjusting  
the levels.

Glen
Glen MacDonald
Core for Communication Research
Virginia Merrill Bloedel Hearing Research Center
Box 357923
University of Washington
Seattle, WA 98195-7923  USA
(206) 616-4156
[hidden email]

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The box said "Requires WindowsXP or better", so I bought a Macintosh.
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On May 13, 2009, at 3:36 PM, Justin McGrath wrote:

> Since ImageJ is an image analysis program and not an image editing  
> program,
> I don't think it works well for creating figures.  If you want  
> something
> roughly along the lines of Photoshop without the hefty price tag,  
> The GIMP
> is suitable.
>
> Justin
>
> On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 11:24 AM, Johannes Schindelin <
> [hidden email]> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> On Wed, 13 May 2009, John Alexander wrote:
>>
>>> I'm making a figure and I realize that I use imageJ for everything
>>> except for assembling the final figure layout.  That's because  
>>> imageJ
>>> does not have an easy layer style approach to moving objects  
>>> around on
>>> an image.
>>>
>>> For example, in photoshop, I can paste an image down, and position  
>>> it.
>>> I can then paste a second image down and position it.  It is easy to
>>> switch between the first and second images, and adjust their  
>>> positions
>>> accordingly.  This goes on and on - and ultimately I have a PSD file
>>> with dozens of layers that I can easily move around.
>>>
>>> In imageJ, once I paste something, I can move it around, but, when  
>>> I'm
>>> done it's position is set in stone.
>>>
>>> I realize that imageJ does have the components to act like  
>>> photoshop -
>>> in essence, a multi-layer tiff as the layers and a z-projection as  
>>> the
>>> final image.  What would be needed is a "layer view" and a "z-
>>> projection
>>> view" in parallel.  with an easy way to "add layer" and to move  
>>> layers
>>> around.
>>>
>>> does anyone know of a simple way of accomplishing this in imageJ?  
>>> I'd
>>> really prefer to use it for all my needs.
>>
>> You can (ab)use TrakEM2 for that...
>>
>> Ciao,
>> Dscho
>>