
This check box pops up the text editor box, which allows you to type/style text all in one separate box. You can increase/decrease the text size, or change its unit of measurement from pixels to any one of the ten other options available. You can scroll through - or type in - font names, to choose from among those installed on your system. The available options are as follows: Font

The text tool options are normally found below the toolbox. You can use other tools with your text, such as the Move tool to change the text’s location. Layers are a very useful aspect of image-editing that we’ll get into more later. You should note that a new layer is created for each text box populated. Both the text and its style can be changed. You can change your text at any time in a Gimp file by clicking on the text (with the text tool activated). There is a text editor available - activated via a check box on the text tool options - which allows you to type in your text and style it all in a single box. (The baseline is the line on which the letters sit, and the kerning adjusts space between letters.) The text option dialog box allows you to change the text font, size, baseline, kerning, color and style (remove all style, bold, italic, underline, strike-through). You will notice that each time you click to create a new text box, a text option dialog box will appear directly above it.

On your image, you can either draw a rectangle to hold your text (which can be limiting, but can also be enlarged later) or click once on the image, right where you want your text to begin.Īfter that, you can type away and see your results take shape. To begin, click on the text tool icon in your toolbox, or use the t keyboard shortcut, or go to Tools > Text on the menu. Gimp’s text tool is much like any other standard image editor’s text tool, but we’ll cover it today in some detail. This necessitates a features that all image-editing programs seem to share - the text tool. Text and images are pretty much polar opposites, but quite often they intersect - usually in the form of text being used in images.
