Explorea collection of 50 color-rich animated overlays that can be used individually or layered. Or try a creative combination, like pairing falling leaves with fairy dust, for unlimited options and inspiration.
Play with overlays and see what happens when you infuse bubbles and digital data or colored particles and liquid metal into your video projects. This bundle of 60 overlay options can help you visually match the mood or effect of your project shapes, colors, liquids, and more.
Experiment and create professional, eye-catching titles with this variety of 60 different motion graphics. Customize to your liking with zoom, fade, and color grading tools to get the exact badges, callouts, shapes, and titles you need.
Have fun with over 50 motion graphics that can be used as accents or backdrops for your titles, like cartoon, hand-drawn, or paint strokes. Use a vintage title or vibrant badge as an impactful embellishment for your videos.
Add that splash of magic to your videos with this bundle of 60 creative options that include gold stars, snowflakes, film reel, Halloween, and social media graphics. You can experiment with inserting them as stand-alone accents, adding them to your titles, or customizing them for a fresh look.
Before selecting a bundle, ensure the bundle you want to select is compatible with your WorkSpaces' protocol, operating system, network, and compute type. For more information about protocols, see Protocols for Amazon WorkSpaces. For more information about networks, see Amazon WorkSpaces client network requirements.
We recommend not exceeding a 250 ms maximum network latency for PCoIP WorkSpaces. To get the best PCoIP WorkSpaces user experience, we recommend keeping the network latency under 100 ms. When the round-trip time (RTT) exceeds 375 ms, the WorkSpaces client connection will shut down. For the best WorkSpaces Streaming Protocol (WSP) user experience, we recommend keeping the RTT under 250 ms. If the RTT is between 250 ms and 400 ms, the user can access the WorkSpace, but performance will decrease significantly.
Amazon WorkSpaces is introducing two new graphics bundles based on the EC2 G4dn family: Graphics.g4dn and GraphicsPro.g4dn. These bundles allow you to run graphics- and compute-intensive workloads on desktops in the cloud as cost-effective solutions for graphics applications that are optimized for NVIDIA GPUs using NVIDIA libraries such as CUDA, CuDNN, OptiX, and Video Codec SDK. They come with the NVIDIA T4 Tensor Core GPU that features multi-precision Turing Tensor Cores and RT Cores, AWS custom second generation Intel Xeon Scalable (Cascade Lake) processors, and the local NVMe storage designed for applications that require fast access to locally stored data.
Graphics.g4dn bundle provides 4vCPUs, 16 GB of RAM, 16 GB of video memory, 125 GB of temporary NVMe SSD local instance store, and a minimum 100 GB of persistent storage for the user volume and root volumes. It is ideal for customers seeking low-cost GPU-enabled virtual desktops to operate mainstream graphics-intensive applications, such as engineering, design, and architectural applications.
GraphicsPro.g4dn bundle offers 16vCPUs, 64 GB of RAM, 16 GB of video memory, 225 GB of temporary NVMe SSD local instance store, and a minimum 100 GB of persistent storage for the user volume and root volumes. The offering enables high-end workstation workflows on WorkSpaces and is ideal for media production, seismic visualization, GIS data processing, data intelligence, small-scale ML model training, and ML inference.
You can deploy Graphics.g4dn or GraphicsPro.g4dn bundles with Windows 10 Desktop experience powered by Windows Server 2019, or you can bring your own Windows licenses. You can launch the new graphics bundles by selecting their names in the Amazon WorkSpaces management console, or through the Amazon WorkSpaces APIs. You can use the new graphics bundles with Amazon WorkSpaces client applications with PCoIP streaming protocols. The new graphics bundles will be available in US East (N. Virginia), US West (Oregon), Canada (Central), Europe (Frankfurt, Ireland, London), Asia Pacific (Mumbai, Seoul, Singapore, Sydney, and Tokyo), and South America (So Paulo).
Check out this Beautiful PurpleYellow watercolor inspired Floral Graphics Bundle! Perfect for events, decor, accessories and fashion. This 20 bundle pack includes floral arrangements, invitation backgrounds, wreaths, bouquets, backgrounds and borders.
The full sentiment, which you've perhaps seen floating about social media, is "I want shorter games with worse graphics made by people who are paid more to work less and I'm not kidding". That's exactly what the games in this particular Itch bundle of 28 indie games are. A good number of people were not kidding, indeed, because the bundle keeps blowing through the modest sales goals that its organiser has set. After initially only setting a goal for $1,000, it's currently surpassed $8,000 with over a week remaining.
You can find "The Shorter Games With Worse Graphics Bundle Round 2" over on Itch. "There's nothing that had a proper publishing deal, just cool games from small teams that you can play through in an afternoon," the bundle's creator says.
One I haven't played, but can at least point out, is the exceptionally titled "My Older Sister Left The Computer So I Got On & Found Myself Trying To Coordinate A Raid In A Game & I Don't Play MMO's". That one is pretty much what it sounds like: coming into a battle with a big baddie you know nothing about and coordinating a bunch of characters you don't know. It happens to be one by the bundle's creator "CannibalInteractive".
There's also a creepy text adventure called The Seance and the second episode of Space Pirate Captain McCallery. There are several small tabletop RPGs in there as well, including one about dating Mothman, one called "Squashbuckler" about being a vegetable with a sword, and something called "Weasel Overdrive".
As with their game My Older Sister, CannibalInteractive's indie game bundles have gathered a bit more success than they'd planned. The first bundle, back in January, set an initial goal of $1,000 and raised over $8,000 by the end. They went with a $1,000 goal again for this second version of the bundle and have since bumped it up twice as it continues to sell. With eleven days remaining, bundle number two has already outsold the original, currently sitting at a total of $8,446 raised from 352 contributors.
As CannibalInteractive puts it: "Seeing all the sentiments against AAA and how now is a good time to support studios that refuse to be a part of that culture I think it's a great time to see people put their money where their mouth is." A good number of folks have indeed, it seems.
At Graphics Bundle, we are passionate about empowering businesses of all sizes with the tools they need to thrive in the digital landscape. Our company specializes in providing comprehensive graphics bundles that cater to diverse digital needs, spanning digital marketing, graphic design, and content creation. We understand the challenges businesses face in the ever-evolving digital world, and we are committed to offering solutions that not only meet but exceed expectations.
Here you can download premium graphic design bundles for a fraction of their retail value! Whether you are looking for a nice new set of fonts, clipart, svg files, or some awesome graphics, you can always be sure to bag a bargain here at TheHungryJPEG.com. We work hard to ensure that each graphic design package is of great value and also desirable. If you have any suggestions on what you would like to see in a bundle, then please let us know at
he...@thehungryjpeg.com
SVG stands for scalable vector graphic file. SVG is a common graphics file format used on the digital media to generate two-dimensional pictures. Since it is scalable, it essentially means that you can stretch the file to the dimensions of your choice without making it pixelated or losing on resolution.
The SVG file format is widely used on websites to show two-dimensional graphics, charts, and drawings. Furthermore, because it is a vector file, it may be scaled up or down without losing any resolution.
What I'd like to do is download, ungroup (separate) them into individual graphics and then download each element as a separate image with a transparent background, so I could work with it in designer suits such as Affinity or even Canva...etc. But every time I tried, I run into so many problems and none of the methods worked. I must be doing something wrong, it can't be that hard... Am I saving them in the right format? Maybe that's the problem. When I download the bundle in the .svg format, is that the same format I'm importing into Affinity to separate? Or should that be a different format? And also, once I save the individual element, would I choose to save in .png format?
Open the eps file. Select all objects by drawing a frame over the entire drawing area with the Move tool,
Press Shift + CTRL + G to ungroup ALL objects.
In the layer selection scroll down to the bottom and delete the layer with the white rectangular curve.
If you work with the option New from clipboard, you can save the separated objects in the .afdesign format. In general, it makes sense to save vector objects in a vector file format, as this gives you the option of scaling the objects without loss.
If you prefer to export the objects in another file format, you can also export the marked object without the intermediate step via the clipboard.
To do this, select an object, go to File --> Export, select the file format. Select under Area: Selection only.
With the success of some game bundles on here, I've been mulling over trying to do this for a while, and with seeing a bunch of people on twitter unironically saying "I want shorter games with worse graphics made by people who are paid more to work less and I'm not kidding" I think it's a great time to see people put their money where their mouth is.
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