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McAvity

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  1. Hello, i'm sorry that i can not give a good answer directly. But probably you can find out with this tutorial for Photoshop, which describes how to achive this effect manually, how to perform the same steps in Affinity Photo (in particular i'm unsure if there is a equal function in Affinity Photo for the "Wind"-Filter in Photoshop): https://www.spoongraphics.design/abstract-pixel-sorting-effect-photoshop-tutorial/ Regards Alex
  2. Hi, thank you for your reply. I had been using GIMP (and Photoshop) quite a while before using Affinity Photo. I just tested the same procedure with GIMP. The pasted picture has a resolution of 300dpi. I also did test to open a 300dpi image in Affinity Photo, made a selection, copied it and than pasted it into GIMP as a new picture. In GIMP the pasted picture has a resolution of 300dpi. Does it make any sense that with Affinity Photo the resolution is dropped to 96dpi? Isn't this also a change of the "image quality"? Regards Alex
  3. Hi, i'm quite new to Affinity Photo so probably i'm just to blind to see the answer or my mistake. I opened a photo which has a resolution of 300dpi. I selected a part of the image and used the function "New from Clipboard" (Strg + Alt + Shift + n). When i check the document size the pasted image only has 96dpi. Is this a desired behaviour or is it a bug? Regards Alex
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