Mashup
User
Guide v.3.7
Mashup
is a free open source Linux program for making a photo montage
(arrangement
of images and text), which may be printed or saved as an image.
License and Warranty
Mashup
is licensed under the GNU General Public License V3 (Free Software
Foundation). Mashup is not warranted for any purpose, but if you find
a
bug, I will try to fix it.
Origin and
Contact
Mashup originates
from the author's web site at http://kornelix.com/mashup
Other web sites may
offer it for download. Modifications may have been made.
If you have questions,
suggestions, or a bug to report, contact kornelix2@gmail.com
Using
mashup
Start mashup from the menu or
with the command:
mashup.
The window will show a blank layout.
The button [+image]
opens a standard file selection dialog. Click an image file,
then click somewhere on the layout. The image is depositied on the
layout. You can also drag and drop an image from the file selection
dialog or from Nautilus or other file browser. Drag the image to the
desired
position in the layout. Drag any corner of the
image to make it bigger or smaller.
To rotate the image,
use the [rotate] button. To add a simple frame around the image, use
the [frame] button. You can select a rectangular area within an image
by using the [trimI] (trim image) button.

Use the button [+text] to add blocks of text to the layout. Enter
text, then click on an empty space in the layout. The text is deposited
on the
layout. Drag the text into final position. Drag from either end of the
text to
change its size. Move the text and images around and change their sizes
as desired. If "transparent" is selected when the text is deposited,
the text background will be transparent (for writing on top of an
image). Blocks of text may also be dragged into the layout from
applications that support this functionality (gedit, evince). Text may
also be rotated the same way as an image.
The toolbar [pack]
button packs and aligns the images. Images that are nearly packed
together (with only small gaps or overlaps) are shifted to eliminate
the gaps and overlaps. Where image corners almost come together, the
images are shifted or resized into alignment. This cannot be generally
perfect, but
straight lines of images can be achieved in most cases, without the
need for fine mouse tweaking. Use [pack] repeatedly to pack the images
in stages.
The toolbar [format]
button selects a paper format for printing. This also sets the width/height
of the window layout to match the selected paper format. Choose [print]
to print the completed
layout. Use the printer properties dialog (a separate admin function)
to
select the correct paper size, otherwise printing may fail
with a "paper mismatch" error.
The [trimL] (trim layout) button cuts off unused parts of the
layout before printing or saving to a file.
The [saveL]
button saves the layout as an image file (PNG).
The buttons [openP] and [saveP] are used to open or save a project. A
project can be saved and opened later to make additions and revisions.
Further
Tips
1. Later images overlap those
added earlier. Click on an image to bring it to the top.
2. Text strings are actually images of text, and are handled the
same as images.
3. An image or text can
be deleted by right-clicking on it.
4. The [rotate] and [frame] buttons apply to the last image or text
inserted, clicked, or moved.
5. The dialogs for
adding images and text may be used in parallel.
Translations
See the text file
/usr/share/doc/mashup/translations for
guidance on how to create or modify a translation.