Software:Brush Strokes Image Editor

From HandWiki
Short description: Bitmap graphics editor
Brush Strokes Image Editor
Brush Strokes Image Editor Filters.png
Screenshot of two tool boxes in the Brush Strokes Image Editor.
Original author(s)Paul Bird
Stable release
1.01
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows
Typebitmap graphics editor
Licensefreeware
Websitewww.pabird.supanet.com/freesoftware/brushstrokes[yes|permanent dead link|dead link}}]

Brush Strokes Image Editor 1.01 is a bitmap graphics editor made by Paul Bird for Microsoft Windows. It is released as freeware.

Features

  • GIF animations
  • filters (e.g. blur, sharpen, negative, outline, posterize)
  • transformations (e.g. rotation, perspective, twist)
  • colour adjustment
  • selections (e.g. magic wand, colour selections)
  • paint tools (e.g. pen, brush, clone tool)
  • pattern and image fills
  • transparency
  • feathering
  • crop

The "Filters & Lenses" tool box has a noise reduction function that retains edges within the canvas. It can significantly reduce or eliminate speckles and smudging in JPEG images. Any of the filters can be applied repeatedly for two seconds by clicking on the last button in the tool box. The first row of buttons in the tool box apply the current pen color as a semi-transparent gradient superimposed on the canvas:

  • Top to bottom
  • Right to left
  • Bottom to top
  • Left to right

The "Distortions" tool box performs horizontal & vertical flips and rotations. It also contains the "stretch or twist" and "perspective" tools, although they do not perform automatic antialiasing, in the free version of the software.

Note: Right-click the mouse in Brush Strokes to show tooltips. They don't appear automatically.

John Conway's Game of Life simulation

An unusual addition to the "Filters & Lenses" tool box is an implementation of John Horton Conway's Game of Life. It's a simulation of the evolution of cellular automata in which cells replicate or die according to a simple set of rules. The initial pattern of cells constitutes the first generation of automata in the simulation. In Brush Strokes, the pattern of pixels in an image constitute the initial state. Three buttons at the bottom of the "Filters & Lenses" tool box launch a single iteration of the game, modify the image by means of plug-in filters, or trigger the last command repeatedly for two seconds. Any of the filters in the tool box can be applied before proceeding with the game.

Bitmap formats

See also

External links