Would you give circe or poison ivy an outfit like that
Well I can certainly take a look when I have the chance, but I won't know for sure until I start getting into it. Though honestly, my edits are really not hard, anyone can do it. Trust me, I can barely draw a stick figure.
All I do is I take the asset pack nude base (its easier to use the ones from the asset pack and not from the game extraction because they are larger). Then I start by opening it in Paint.
- Use the line, spline and in some case pre-created shapes tools to draw the outline of the outfit in black on the nude base.
- Don't worry if you cross existing lines, just make sure you don't go outside the body.
- In most cases, you only need to do the outfit lines once on one of the bodies. More often than not, the body and pose is the same and only the facial expressions change. But check to be safe, sometimes the hair and head position change, in which case you might have to manually draw for those as well.
- Once you have the outline of the clothes drawn, save the file as a copy. Make sure you keep the original clean copy somewhere safe in case you need it.
Then open the edited file in GIMP.
- Use the lasso select tool and go right down the middle of the lines you drew so that the outfit is selected.
- Use the magic wand selection tool to Remove the black outlines, so that only the area inside the border you drew is selected.
- If there are any black lines that you want to erase, go back to the lasso select and manually add them to the selection area.
- Use the clone stamp tool to 'erase' anything you don't want to show. So if you want the outfit to be opaque, clone stamp skin tone over the nipples. If you want the outfit to stretch across the breasts instead of between them, clone stame out the border of the breasts within the area of your outfit.
- Decide if you want everything to be all the same color, or if you want some pieces to be different. If need be, select none and repeart steps one and two for all parts that are going to be one color.
- Use the Colorize tool. This will bring up a box with three sliders for Hue, Saturation and Lightness. Adjust the sliders until you get the desired color. Doing it this way will preserve the 'shading', so areas of skin that are darker when you begin will be darker when you are done, so it doesn't look like a flat sheet pasted in. Be mindful of this when doing the clone stamp.
- Do a select none, then again use the lasso tool. Carefully select around the outfit, staying outside the borders that you drew. Don't worry if you go outside the body, but be careful not to select any areas that are different between the poses (hair, face, etc). Use the wand to remove the background color from the selection.
- Copy and paste, then slide the outfit over until it is on top of the next pose. Zoom in close and make sure it is lining up properly, and you are getting any 'jagged edges' anywhere.
- Repeat until all the poses are dressed.
- Export the image as something like a jpeg or png.
And you are done. Its very basic, but it does allow for creating the simple outfits that I do. You can also play around with GIMPs filters to add special effects if you want, but this is how I do pretty much all of my edits. For anything more complex, you'll have to ask the better editors here.