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Krita 3.0: The Animation Release

269 points| r3bl | 9 years ago |krita.org

43 comments

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[+] emilsedgh|9 years ago|reply
Krita is having a Kickstarter campaign [0] to fund next year's development.

There is also a blog post [1] describing how Krita is funded and as you can see, the Kickstarter campaign plays a huge role in its development.

So if you are a Krita user, consider funding the campaign.

[0] https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/krita/krita-2016-lets-m...

[1] https://krita.org/item/funding-kritas-development/

Edit: The campaign has already reached its goal, but there are stretch goals to achieve.

[+] reitanqild|9 years ago|reply
Really happy to see some real contributions! Maybe crowdfunding and Open Source has a bright future together?
[+] SwellJoe|9 years ago|reply
Krita has come a long way since I last looked at it. I had no idea it was still so actively developed. Super cool. I don't do a lot of visual stuff, and I've always reached for Gimp or Inkscape when I need to...but, seeing some of the stuff Krita can do makes me wanna give it a try next time I need art.
[+] baldfat|9 years ago|reply
I was one of the few that really was disappointed in the change of Krita from a better Gimp (In my opinion) to a Painting Program. I still funded the project and just trusted the vision of the team. They really have hit a home run and they are a shinning example of what Open Source can do.

Now here is hoping Gimp can learn and blow away the competition in raster image processing.

[+] kolme|9 years ago|reply
Krita is my absolute favorite tool when I'm drawing with a Wacom. It gets out of the way and let you get in "the zone" and has many powerful features. It's just fantastic.
[+] nwah1|9 years ago|reply
Love Krita. This upgrade to QT5 will provide an important base for future development. The brisk pace of development is encouraging.

Although I still find myself using GIMP and Inkscape for usability reasons. But, given that they are being developed at a snail's pace, I tend to think I will be increasingly using Krita.

[+] macco|9 years ago|reply
Do they really compete with each other? I thought they would complement each other, am I wrong?
[+] wingerlang|9 years ago|reply
Krita means crayon in Swedish, fitting.
[+] unwind|9 years ago|reply
The original author is German.

From the About page:

The name KImageShop fell foul of trademark law in Germany, and KImageShop was renamed to Krayon, which also appeared to infringe on an existing trademark, so Krayon was finally renamed to Krita in 2002.

Of course, "Krita" can also be read as K-rita, where "rita" means "draw" in Swedish (but not in German) and the K is the usual Qt/KDE prefix.

However, here[0] is a mailing list message from 2002 that answers:

it is the Swedish work [sic] for crayon.

So it seems you're really spot on.

[0] https://mail.kde.org/pipermail/kimageshop/2002-November/0000...

[+] unixhero|9 years ago|reply
Yay. I use Krita for all my Photoshop-like needs. Now it just got Even better.
[+] baldfat|9 years ago|reply
> Linux AppImages – Now different Linux users can have the latest version without waiting on their distribution repository updates.

This sounds REALLY interesting. I am dying to see how the Debian community takes to this idea.

http://appimage.org/

> Download an application, make it executable, and run! No need to install. No system libraries or system preferences are altered.

[+] kzrdude|9 years ago|reply
MyPaint still exists and its 1.2 release is a very nice program. It's more focused and has less features than Krita, but it's also very ergonomic to work with. Does anyone know if MyPaint is likely to stick around, when Krita is developing so much?
[+] thedaemon|9 years ago|reply
I have since stopped using MyPaint and have even uninstalled it. Krita does the same and more these days.
[+] tehrei|9 years ago|reply
Artists who use Linux always seemed like a crazy bunch.

Btw, if anyone needs a simple image editor for Linux, I can't recommend Pinta enough. It's basically Paint.NET. Gimp didn't have the one feature I need - drawing lines, squares, circles, etc. and Kolourpaint doesn't have layers.

[+] 0x54MUR41|9 years ago|reply
Love Krita. By the way, out of topic here. Does Krita support for note-sketching?

I know the most of use cases using Krita is sketching characters.

[+] lqdc13|9 years ago|reply
Seems really buggy on OSX (just drew two rectangles and filled them with colors - some parts of the rectangle don't appear until you zoom in and then back out 2x).

Paint for Windows still seems like the single best drawing program for simple things.

[+] scardine|9 years ago|reply
Krita is for art, not for simple things - comparing it with paint is kind of disrespectful even if meant as a joke.

It has an amazing selection of preset brushes and my personal experience with it is joyful.

[+] boudewijnrempt|9 years ago|reply
Well, as we noted in the release notes: Krita on OSX still has problems with rendering the image because we're depending on OpenGL and Apple's OpenGL drivers are missing stuff. You can disable OpenGL for now; we want to fully support OSX in the 3.1 release, which should be out in September.
[+] tetraodonpuffer|9 years ago|reply
I think there were some issues with OpenGL on OS/X, I've been using the RC on windows and the latest git on linux and I haven't hit any issue
[+] konart|9 years ago|reply
OSX never was a target platform, until recent times.

3.0 is still labeled as unstable release for OSX. 3.1 should be the stable though.

[+] joshaidan|9 years ago|reply
I read on the website that one of the future project goals is to improve stability on OSX. Reading the artist interviews it sounds like it performs very well in Linux.