In the tool bar.
State the obvious.
Right click on the selection, mouse over "Select...", choose "none".
GIMP means GNU Image Manipulation Program GIMP is an image editing software. It is just like a computers paint program except more advanced and included more editing/formatting tools.
Using selection tools from Toolbox: Magic Wand, Quick Selection tool, Rectangular and Elliptical Marquee tools...
Different types of gimp can refer to various activities, such as gimping in terms of crafting or in digital art. For crafting, gimp refers to a type of plastic lace used to create colorful designs through knotting or weaving techniques. In digital art, gimp refers to using the GIMP software, where you can create and manipulate images using tools for drawing, painting, and photo editing. To get started, familiarize yourself with the basic tools of your chosen medium, whether it’s learning knotting techniques for crafting or exploring the interface and features of GIMP software for digital art.
To convert ABR (Adobe Brush) and PSPBrush files to GIMP, you can use a third-party tool like GIMP's ABR Viewer or a dedicated converter such as "AbrMate." For ABR files, import the brushes into the ABR Viewer and export them in a format compatible with GIMP, such as PNG or GIMP's native brush format. PSPBrush files may require conversion to a compatible format using similar tools or by manually recreating the brushes in GIMP. After conversion, load the new brushes into GIMP via the "Brushes" directory.
I would say Gimp, Pixlr, Paint.NET, PicMonkey... These are the great alternatives for Photoshop, but I would recommend Gimp as the 1st one.
Selection tools, Enhancement tools, Vector tools, Navigation tools.
you click on the black box in front of the white box under all the tools.
Select one: a. Adobe Director b. GIMP c. Adobe Flash
Gimp runs many similar tools and capabilities. And at present is free
Using a layer mask, using path tool, convert path to selection, invert selection, fill selection in mask with black
An open-source graphics powerhouse, often dubbed the free counterpart to Adobe Photoshop, brimming with creative tools.