My daughter likes to draw on the computer. I don't remember exactly how it started, but she draws in GIMP using my Genius pen tablet, on my secondary monitor. I used to have Linux running in a VirtualBox with GIMP running on my second monitor for her, but VB doesn't completely work in Windows 10 yet. A while back I tried running GIMP on one of my Raspberry Pi's but it was just too sluggish to be useful, frustratingly slow for a (then) 3-year-old. It runs much better on a Raspberry Pi 2. It still lags if she goes crazy with a big brush, but it works.

For a while, she's been having an issue with the Move tool getting selected and then her work getting moved around on the screen instead of being able to draw on it. There are also too many things on the screen that might get clicked on. My daughter doesn't stay in the drawing area very well, so extraneous things on the screen end up getting clicked that put GIMP in an unintended mode. I finally got tired of fixing that for her and played around in GIMP's settings to simplify the screen. Here's what I came up with.

Settings

I set up GIMP to full screen with large drawing area on the screen, and a limited number of tools. For fullscreen mode, I turned off all unnecessary screen elements (menu, statusbar, etc).

Open Edit > Preferences

  • Environment: Untick Confirm closing of unsaved images. Make it easier to close and start a new image
  • Toolbox: Turn off visibility of most tools. I left only paintbucket, paintbrush and eraser You can turn on/off a couple of other controls if you wish.
  • Default Image: Set the image size appropriate for your screen. I have a 1920x1200 monitor and 900x600 works well when in fullscreen mode and zoomed to fit. It's smaller than actual pixel size to reduce CPU load.
  • Image Windows: Set marching ants speed to something high so it doesn't use so much CPU (2000). Set Pointer rendering to Black & white.
  • Image Windows > Appearance: For fullscreen mode, I turned off all windows decorations (menubar, etc)
  • Window Management: Untick "Save window positions on exit" and click the button "Save Window Positions Now" (after you have all of the docks set the way you want them).

Helpful keyboard shortcuts

Close image Ctrl-W
New image Ctrl-N (Could also select all, delete, select none) 
Select All  Ctrl-A 
Select None Shift-Ctrl-A 
Fullscreen  F11 
Fit Image Ctrl-Shift-J 
Paintbrush P

Equipment

I'm using the Raspberry Pi 2.0 Model B with a wireless keyboard/mouse combo (for me to control) and pen tablet (for my daughter to draw with). I would recommend the Logitech K400r, which I got from Walmart for about $30. I have a Genius G-Pen F610 that I got from Amazon a few years ago. Look in GIMP's Input settings (Edit > Input devices) for changing pressure sensitivity and other things. My daughter basically has two pressures (none and hard), so I didn't experiment much with that, but it might be interesting for more advanced artists. The pen that came with the tablet stopped working for a while until I opened it up and found a small wire (seriously, about as thin as a hair) that needed to be resoldered. Probably due to being beaten on by a toddler. 

Other things to note

* If the left click button is pressed on the pen while it is not on the tablet, GIMP starts panning the image. Fit it back in the window by pressing Ctrl-Shift-J.

* If the right click button is pressed on the pen, the menu pops up and then all sorts of things might (will) get clicked on. I don't see any way to disable the pen buttons.

Installing GBridge on Windows 8, Windows 8.1 and Windows 10

 

Just because I don't want to have to look this up again. Windows 8's driver signing enforcement prevents installing GBridge's network drivers. I posted how to work around that on gbridge.net forums when I was testing the Windows 8 preview, but their forum is offline now.

Windows 8

This method works for Professional or Home versions.

Grape Harvest

 

I finally got a full harvest off of this vine (before birds, etc.) These grapes are pretty sour, if you just pick and eat. And seedy. However, I always thought they might make good jelly or something. So this year, I have lots of grapes to try something.

Basically, the process is:

Raspberry-Vanilla Pudding

We have a picnic on July 4 where we are supposed to bring a dish. An hour before the picnic... what should we bring? We have lots of fresh-picked raspberries and that vanilla pudding I got last week. After a few minutes of Google-searching for things that use those two ingredients (no results, except for baked items and stuff of the wrong kind), I am going to make my own recipe for this.

Five Crunch Mix

 
Five different textures of crunch for a delightful and versatile snack that doesn't leave your taste buds feeling like you drank an ocean of saltwater.
 
Shake together in a container (or snack bag) in the desired proportions....
  • honey nut cheerios
  • pretzels (thin style, broken in pieces)
  • unsalted peanuts
  • Spanish peanuts
  • banana chips
  • raisins
 
I usually go heavy on the cheerios.