Perhaps it’s not as convenient as with procedural adjustment layers, but it’s still non-destructive. If you save any “destructive” edits to a new layer, you have a non-destructive edit (i.e. Ill probably go back and redo this after ive learned some new tricks though. Krita for painting/animation is a slam dunk though, its so good and its brush engine is amazing but its designed to be lolĮDIT: I cant find the finished one but an example is this image i was working on a while ago but this image took something like 60+ layers simply because if i didnt do it that way the image became a mess with the needed edits for what i was going for. I love and use GIMP for all my photo editing work I can’t do in Darktable but anyone being honest isn’t going to say its the same as Photoshop as ATM Photoshop is a better tool. Krita on the other hand works in adjustment layers just like Photoshop. Its on the roadmap for gimp 3.2 but not there yet. In GIMP unless you use use it in a specific way with lots of layer copies of the original image degrades image quality with too many edits. Operations in GIMP except maybe a couple actually change the original image. GIMP does not support non destructive yet. Both Krita and GIMP support destructive and non-destructive image editing (just like photoshop).
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