5.9. Polar Coordinates
5.9.1. Overview
Figure 17.74. Example for Polar Coordinates filter
Original image
“Polar Coordinates” filter applied
It gives a circular or a rectangular representation of your image with all the possible intermediates between both.
5.9.2. Activating the filter
You can find this filter through Filters → Distorts → Polar Coordinates….
5.9.3. Options
Figure 17.75. “Polar Coordinates” filter options
Presets, “Input Type”, Clipping, Blending Options, Preview, Split view
Note | |
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These options are described in Section 2, “Common Features”. |
Circle depth in percent
Slider and input box allow you to set the “circularity” of the transformation, from rectangle (0%) to circle (100%).
Offset angle
This option controls the angle the drawing will start from (0 - 359°), and so turns it around the circle center.
Map backwards
When this option is checked, the drawing will start from the right instead of the left.
Map from top
If unchecked, the mapping will put the bottom row in the middle and the top row on the outside. If checked, it will be the opposite.
To polar
If unchecked, the image will be circularly mapped into a rectangle (odd effect). If checked, the image will be mapped into a circle.
X, Y
These polar coordinates are active only if the “Choose middle” option is unchecked.
Choose middle
Checked by default: origin center is at the middle of the layer. If unchecked, you can modify X and Y parameters to position the origin center.
5.9.4. Examples
Figure 17.76. With text
If you have just written the text, you must Flatten the image before using the filter.
Figure 17.77. With two horizontal bars