In a new milestone release, the team behindGIMPhas officially launched version 3.0 of the well-knownphoto-editing program– a whopping twenty-one years after the previous major numbered update first hit the web.

GIMP 3.0 officially arrived on March 16, and it brings with it a number of notable new features and enhancements. These include new layer organization tools, improved color management, enhanced format support, and an upgraded graphical toolkit.

GIMP tag

“This is the end result of seven years of hard work by volunteer developers, designers, artists, and community members (for reference, GIMP 2.10 was firstpublished in 2018and the initial development version of GIMP 3.0 wasreleased in 2020),” says the official GIMP Teamin a blog post.

GIMP, which stands for GNU Image Manipulation Program, is one of the most iconic photo-editing programs to ever grace the PC. GIMP is free and open-source, and it’s been around on bothWindowsandmacOSfor a great many years.

GIMP 3.0 splash screen by Sevenix

GIMP, which stands for GNU Image Manipulation Program, is a free and open-source photo-editing program for Windows, macOS, and Linux-based operating systems.

GIMP 3.0 includes a number of new features, in addition to a logo refresh

GIMP 3.0 is the first major update to the photo editor in over 2 decades

GIMP 3.0 arrives with several new features to call its own, which makes sense given that it’s a major numbered release. The following are a few of the more notable upgrades that have been made over the previous 2.10 version release:

A full change log of GIMP 3.0 features, improvements, and tweaks can be found over on the software’sofficial Release Notes page.

Canva on a desktop computer.

In addition to these new features, the GIMP 3.0 experience arrives with a refreshed logo in tow – the program’s Wilber mascot animal now sports a flatter and less skeuomorphic look overall.

A new version 3.0-specific splash screen is also on display upon first boot of the software, which appears to be a uniquely designed landscape image. This particular piece of digital art is attributed to a creator by the name of Sevenix.

apple-clean-up-feature

My 5 favorite iPad photo editing apps that are better than Photoshop

Adobe makes excellent tablet software, but you don’t necessarily have to pay for it to get a similar photo editing experience.

GIMP is great, but does 3.0 do enough to stave off competition?

These days, a number of photo-editing competitors are vying for total market domination

For as exciting as the 3.0 release of GIMP is, I can’t help but wonder whether there’s enough here to drive new market share for the storied photo editor. Aside from the usual suspects – AdobePhotoshopandLightroom,Affinity Photo, and others – a new crop of web-based editors have recently taken the world by storm.

Perhaps most noteworthy of all isCanva, an online graphic design and image-editing platform with a user-friendly design that makes it an ideal choice for beginners. By contrast, GIMP maintains a more traditional user interface guided by PC operating system principals of the 1990s and 2000s.

GIMP is certainly a powerful tool, and its interface is intuitive for those already acclimated to traditional photo-editing software, but version 3.0 doesn’t do much in terms of improving the discoverability of features or offering a ‘beginner mode,’ as it were.

…it’s great to see the continued support of free and open-source image editing suites like GIMP.

Apple also appears keen to take on the photo-editing market, at least if itsrecent acquisition of Pixelmatoris anything to go off of. In a world of big-tech software giants, there’s less air left in the room for community-driven and non-profit software to survive and thrive in.

In any case, it’s great to see the continued support of free and open-source image editing suites like GIMP, and I firmly believe that the program plays an important (if somewhat niche) role in today’s current digital app landscape.

Apple’s new photo feature makes me look like a professional photo editor

Apple finally has its own version of Google Magic Eraser with Clean Up.