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- Posted: 12 years ago
- Modified: 12 years ago
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Post #1
This tutorial is unofficial and is in need of a spell and grammmar check. I also need someone who has never used PDN to test out the tutorial and see if it is any help. I am having trouble posting the tutorial. Some reason I have to post it in small bits.
Learning how to use Paint.net
Before you start reading this I need to let you know that map making isn’t always fun. For some people it won’t be fun at all. At first it will be frustrating because you won’t understand how to do certain things. I made this tutorial to try and make it easier to understand those confusing things.
I’m going to try and make this a quick and easy to understand tutorial but if something I say doesn’t make sense to you please message me, Pntbttr. Please follow along with Paint.net (PDN). Here is where you can download PDN:
http://www.getpaint.net/download.html
If you don’t want to read all of this (I strongly suggest that you do) you can use the tip bar on the bottom of PDN. It will give you tips about the tool you are using. If you just don’t understand one or two things just hit “ctrl” + “F” and type in a key word and it will search for that word.
This is the order in which I will explain how to use PDN:
Tip Bar (already been explained above)
Gadgets
• Colors
• Tools
Special Bar
1. Size
2. Antialiasing
3. Blendin
4. Flood Mode
5. Tolerance
6. Fill
7. Special Shape Option
8. Select Mode
9. Tools Without Special Options
10. Tools With Unique Special Options
How to use a Tool
• Layers
• History
Tool Bar
File
Edit
View
Image
Layers
Adjustments
Effects
Utilities
Window
Help
Image list, size and location
Plugins
Once you open PDN you will immediately notice a white rectangle that takes up most of the screen, four boxes two on each side of the screen and a long bar with symbols and words across it. The white rectangle, which I call the canvas, is where you will be making your map. Those four boxes are the most helpful tools of PDN, I call them gadgets. That white bar with tons of words and symbols is where you can find a lot of helpful options, I’m going to call the part with words the tool bar the part with images the image bar and the part that has different options depending on which tool you are using the special bar.
If you can’t find the gadgets hit the following buttons:
F5 (this will make Tools appear)
F6 (this will make History appear)
F7 (this will make Layers appear)
F8 (this will make Colors appear)
Or look on the tool bar for the word “Window”. Click on window and a drop down box will appear. The drop down box has four options at the top which will make the gadgets (Tools, History, Layers, Colors) appear.
Gadgets
• “Colors”
Obviously this is where you get your colors. It’s complicated though. You can have two colors selected at once: The “Primary” and the “Secondary”. To select the color you want just click on one of the preset square colors, that area is called the palette, at the bottom of the box or search the color circle for the color you want. If you select a color with the right side of the mouse it will select the color in secondary and if you select a color with the left side of your mouse than it will be put in primary. There is also a button that says either primary or secondary on it. If you click on this box a drop down box will appear with the options primary and secondary if secondary is selected than the left/right click rule is the opposite of what I told you. Once you select a color the color will appear in one of the two (right/left click rule) boxes in the top right of the Colors box. You probably noticed a smaller version of the black and white boxes below the colors if you click on that button it will change your colors back to black and white. There is also a blue arrow above the color boxes. That arrow will change which color is primary and secondary. If you look in the top right of the colors box you will see a box that says more>> on it. Once you click on that box the whole color box will get bigger. There will be more preset colors and a ton of slides with letters next to them.
R = Red (this is where you can change the amount of red that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
G = Green (this is where you can change the amount of green that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
B = Blue (this is where you can change the amount of blue that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
H = Hue (the hue is basically the color circle except the saturation and variance don’t change when in use)
S = Saturation (this is where you can change the amount of white that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
V = Variance (this is where you can change the amount of black that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
I normally take a preset color and lower the S and V slides to get the color I want. I never use the Transparency – Alpha slide (just changes the amount of invisibility) (you can do the same thing to a whole layer in layer properties). (click on <<Less) In the bottom left corner (above the preset square colors) there are two options: the one on the left (box with your primary color in it) will let you save a color you are using on your palette and the one on the right will let you either save a palette, open an already saved palette or reset the presets to the default colors.
Wondering what to do with the hex:000000 thingy? Try typing in FF0000. It came out bright red, right? Basically there is a little code for each color and if you type it in than the color will be selected. The problem is the code is kind of complicated. I think. I don’t really understand it and nobody has explained it to me so I don’t really know how to just type letters and numbers in to get the color I want.
Learning how to use Paint.net
Before you start reading this I need to let you know that map making isn’t always fun. For some people it won’t be fun at all. At first it will be frustrating because you won’t understand how to do certain things. I made this tutorial to try and make it easier to understand those confusing things.
I’m going to try and make this a quick and easy to understand tutorial but if something I say doesn’t make sense to you please message me, Pntbttr. Please follow along with Paint.net (PDN). Here is where you can download PDN:
http://www.getpaint.net/download.html
If you don’t want to read all of this (I strongly suggest that you do) you can use the tip bar on the bottom of PDN. It will give you tips about the tool you are using. If you just don’t understand one or two things just hit “ctrl” + “F” and type in a key word and it will search for that word.
This is the order in which I will explain how to use PDN:
Tip Bar (already been explained above)
Gadgets
• Colors
• Tools
Special Bar
1. Size
2. Antialiasing
3. Blendin
4. Flood Mode
5. Tolerance
6. Fill
7. Special Shape Option
8. Select Mode
9. Tools Without Special Options
10. Tools With Unique Special Options
How to use a Tool
• Layers
• History
Tool Bar
File
Edit
View
Image
Layers
Adjustments
Effects
Utilities
Window
Help
Image list, size and location
Plugins
Once you open PDN you will immediately notice a white rectangle that takes up most of the screen, four boxes two on each side of the screen and a long bar with symbols and words across it. The white rectangle, which I call the canvas, is where you will be making your map. Those four boxes are the most helpful tools of PDN, I call them gadgets. That white bar with tons of words and symbols is where you can find a lot of helpful options, I’m going to call the part with words the tool bar the part with images the image bar and the part that has different options depending on which tool you are using the special bar.
If you can’t find the gadgets hit the following buttons:
F5 (this will make Tools appear)
F6 (this will make History appear)
F7 (this will make Layers appear)
F8 (this will make Colors appear)
Or look on the tool bar for the word “Window”. Click on window and a drop down box will appear. The drop down box has four options at the top which will make the gadgets (Tools, History, Layers, Colors) appear.
Gadgets
• “Colors”
Obviously this is where you get your colors. It’s complicated though. You can have two colors selected at once: The “Primary” and the “Secondary”. To select the color you want just click on one of the preset square colors, that area is called the palette, at the bottom of the box or search the color circle for the color you want. If you select a color with the right side of the mouse it will select the color in secondary and if you select a color with the left side of your mouse than it will be put in primary. There is also a button that says either primary or secondary on it. If you click on this box a drop down box will appear with the options primary and secondary if secondary is selected than the left/right click rule is the opposite of what I told you. Once you select a color the color will appear in one of the two (right/left click rule) boxes in the top right of the Colors box. You probably noticed a smaller version of the black and white boxes below the colors if you click on that button it will change your colors back to black and white. There is also a blue arrow above the color boxes. That arrow will change which color is primary and secondary. If you look in the top right of the colors box you will see a box that says more>> on it. Once you click on that box the whole color box will get bigger. There will be more preset colors and a ton of slides with letters next to them.
R = Red (this is where you can change the amount of red that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
G = Green (this is where you can change the amount of green that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
B = Blue (this is where you can change the amount of blue that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
H = Hue (the hue is basically the color circle except the saturation and variance don’t change when in use)
S = Saturation (this is where you can change the amount of white that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
V = Variance (this is where you can change the amount of black that is mixed in with the color you are already using)
I normally take a preset color and lower the S and V slides to get the color I want. I never use the Transparency – Alpha slide (just changes the amount of invisibility) (you can do the same thing to a whole layer in layer properties). (click on <<Less) In the bottom left corner (above the preset square colors) there are two options: the one on the left (box with your primary color in it) will let you save a color you are using on your palette and the one on the right will let you either save a palette, open an already saved palette or reset the presets to the default colors.
Wondering what to do with the hex:000000 thingy? Try typing in FF0000. It came out bright red, right? Basically there is a little code for each color and if you type it in than the color will be selected. The problem is the code is kind of complicated. I think. I don’t really understand it and nobody has explained it to me so I don’t really know how to just type letters and numbers in to get the color I want.