If you have been reading this series of articles on our current open source paint programs, you likely know my own interest stems from my slow-but-steady move from Windows to Ubuntu Linux. As Adobe does not develop for the Linux platform, such a move means I must bid a very painful goodbye to Photoshop. A tool that I have used and loved since I was first on its beta team in 1989!

The question I’ve been trying to answer is whether I can make the open source GIMP paint program deliver as a reasonable substitute for professional work. For me, that means working on major brands, and tight deadlines so I need the best photo editing software. The answer has not been an obvious one, as the more I have worked with GIMP, the more head-banging issues I have encountered (see my Gimp 3.0 review for more).

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How feature-rich GIMP actually is
Feature Photoshop GIMP
3D Tools Removed in 2024 None
Animation Yes Yes, using GAP
Smart Objects Yes No. Coming in v. 3.2
Adjustment Layers Yes Yes (new and expanding)
Range of color controls Yes Yes, very similar to PS
Liquify Yes Yes (Warp Transform)
Range of Paint tools Yes Yes, very similar to PS
Healing Tools Yes Yes, but not as good
Healing Brush Yes Yes, but not as good
History Panel Yes Yes
Generative Fills/AI Yes Waiting for plugin update
Selection tools Yes Yes, but not as good
Select Main Subject Yes, automatically Yes, gets the job done
Plugins Large selection and 3rd party Large selection with G’MIC
Full Layer Pallet with Masks Yes Yes
Scripting/Macros Macros More powerful scripting
Distortion Tools Yes Yes, but mostly not as good
CMYK Supported Yes No
Text Support Yes, quite good Yes, but not as good
Bezier Curve Toolset Yes, very good Yes, mostly as good
Printing Yes Yes, with issues
Transform Yes (Control-T) Yes, but in 3 separate tools
RAW edit/import Yes, using “Camera” plugin Yes, using Darktable plugin
Brush tools/selection Very good, if unwieldy dialog Decent, inferior to PS or Krita
Native file format PSD XCF
Open/Save PSD files Yes (duh!) Yes, with feature limits
GPU acceleration Yes No
OS integration, dialog boxes Just fine Kludgy on Windows
Cost $240-276US/year, every year Free. Install everywhere.