Painting is $15 US shareware. Use the enclosed Register program to buy Painting. For more details, see the section on “Registering Painting” in the documentation.
Painting is quite easy to use, but at least skim the documentation—especially the sections on Shortcuts & Tips. The Features section will at least inform you of things that Painting has that you may have missed. And make sure you read the legal disclaimer in the documentation.
What you should have
Painting application A fat binary that can be used on regular 68k Macs and Power Macs. Requires System 7.5 or better.
Colour Sets folder A folder which contains three colour set files: GX Common Colors (from QuickDraw GX, but you don’t need QuickDraw GX in order to use it), Apple Icon Colours (These are Apple’s recommended colours for use on icons. These are also the only one’s that darken when the icon is selected), and Greys (they’re a bunch of grapes).
Painting Readme ???
Painting Documentation This is the user’s guide for Painting. Read it. You’ll find a lot of useful information.
Register Use this application if you decide to purchase Painting to keep it. There are a variety of payment options. See the documentation for details.
About the Colour Sets Folder
If you make your own colour sets, save them in the Colour Sets folder to have Painting automatically open them when you launch Painting.
Version History
Changes in 1.5
• Way cool new splash screen. It doesn't come up when Navigator’s running, because Navigator takes way too long to redraw afterwards (when that happens it seems like the Mac is hung).
• Added rectangle lasso selection, free form selection, and circle selection tools. Hold down the mouse button on the lasso tool in order to get the popup menu to use them.
• Added the ability to rotate images 90°.
• Added the ability to flip images horizontally and vertically.
• Added simple brightness control.
• With QuickTime 3.0 or better installed, you can now save images in Photoshop, Windows BMP, and QuickTime file formats in addition to JPEG. The “Export JPEG…” command changes to an “Export…” command.
• With QuickTime 2.5 or better installed, Painting can open several file formats directly, such as JPEG, GIF, TIFF, and Photoshop. This is done without the Finder doing translation, or without you having to save a “Converted” file when using the Open command.
• Much more Appearance Manager support.
• GX Printing support is gone (there’s a tear in my eye), but classic printing support is vastly improved. There's a printing dialog box shown during the operation, and Painting now outputs more than one page :)
• Added Balloon Help for the menus.
• The documentation is now an eDoc self reading document. It allows much nicer formatting and it provides an active index to make it more useable. I am hoping that more people will read the documentation, although I suspect that some people may hate it. Please let me know either way.
• The default tool is now the paint brush instead of the rectangle selection.
• I got rid of the little bumpiness out of the paint brush tool. It was only noticable if the brush size was near 1.
• The line tool now works when the stroke is disabled.
• Fixed a couple dumb memory leaks involved with selections.
• Fixed the problem that a couple users reported when opening some compressed 24-bit pictures (the image would show up as black).
• More minor bug fixes and cosmetic improvements.
Changes in 1.1
• There’s a powerful new text tool that supports smoothing (anti-aliased text).
• A new hand tool lets you scroll your document easier.
• Some commands have been taken out of the Edit menu and put into a new Painting menu, along with some new commands. This menu will grow in the future…
• Command-clicking with the pencil tool will zoom to either 8x zoom or 1x zoom (if you’re not at 8x, you will zoom to 8x).
• The dropper tool has more options as to how it adds colours to the colour palette. You can now specify a colour set to always be the target for new colours created by the dropper tool.
• You can invert graphics.
• For the shape tools, you can use the shift key at any time while painting to constrain the shape, rather than doing it before you click.
• Document windows now use live scrolling. Painting also supports Marc Moini’s Smart Scroll (http://www.kagi.com/authors/marc).
• You can hide the edges of a selection.
• Colour Sets are now handled more like documents. They can be considered “dirty.” Before, Painting just saved them when you quit unless if the file was locked.
• You can still have Painting automatically save colour sets when you quit. Just use the “Edit Set…” command in the Colours Palette pop up menu, and select “Skip Save Dialog.” You can tell it to always not save the set by choosing the “Don’t Save” radio button or always save the set using the “Save” radio button.
• The names of the colour sets in the palette have little icons next to them. If the colour set is the ink dropper target (see above), the icon indicates that.
• Added a “Save” command for colour sets in the pop up (before you could only Save As).
• The Generate Name button in the New/Edit Colour dialogs generates names more precisely.
• Painting remembers which colour sets were expanded or collapsed.
• You can double click colour sets from the Finder to open them in Painting.
• Added support for the Mac OS 8 Appearance Manager. Painting now looks good running under System 7 and Mac OS 8.
• More stuff, such as user interface improvements and general bug fixes.
Changes from 1.0 to 1.0.4
• Bug fixes, bug fixes, bug fixes…
Redistributing Painting
Only give people the original Stuffit Archive that contains the Painting application, the Colour Sets folder (along with the colour sets), this Readme file, the Painting Documentation file, the Netscape Bookmark, and the Register application. Painting may not be redistributed commercially in any way (except for online services) without my written consent.
Contacting the Author
Send mail and comments to sarwat@kagi.com.
Check out Painting’s web site at http://www.interlog.com/~sarwat/painting/
Check out Sarwat’s web site at http://www.interlog.com/~sarwat/