Editing Advanced stippling

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'''The following information is retained for historical purposes.  Adrian Secord has removed his Weighted Voronoi Stippler program from his website. Two other stipplers based upon Adrian's work and which produce SVG to consider are Evil Mad Science's [[StippleGen]] and  [http://www.saliences.com/projects/npr/stippling/stippling.html http://www.saliences.com/projects/npr/stippling/stippling.html].'''
 
'''The following information is retained for historical purposes.  Adrian Secord has removed his Weighted Voronoi Stippler program from his website. Two other stipplers based upon Adrian's work and which produce SVG to consider are Evil Mad Science's [[StippleGen]] and  [http://www.saliences.com/projects/npr/stippling/stippling.html http://www.saliences.com/projects/npr/stippling/stippling.html].'''
  
http://wiki.evilmadscience.com/s3/eggbot/tspart/vstippling.png
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http://mtbaldy.us/~dnewman/tspart/vstippling.png
  
 
Unfortunately, there is very little in the way of ready-to-use software packages or plugins for automatically producing stippled images.  While tutorials exist, they largely focus on reproducing a specific style of stippled art work (e.g., Hedcut).  Such techniques tend to be inappropriate to TSP art as they lack control over the number of stipples used.  And, too many stipples lead to artwork which is too detailed for most pen tips.  Existing software which permits control over the number of stipples tends to be "research grade".  That is, the software's primary design goal was not  ease of use, clarity, or robustness.  With that in mind, OS X and, maybe, Windows users as well, have the option of trying out Adrian Secord's weighted Voronoi stippler [1].
 
Unfortunately, there is very little in the way of ready-to-use software packages or plugins for automatically producing stippled images.  While tutorials exist, they largely focus on reproducing a specific style of stippled art work (e.g., Hedcut).  Such techniques tend to be inappropriate to TSP art as they lack control over the number of stipples used.  And, too many stipples lead to artwork which is too detailed for most pen tips.  Existing software which permits control over the number of stipples tends to be "research grade".  That is, the software's primary design goal was not  ease of use, clarity, or robustness.  With that in mind, OS X and, maybe, Windows users as well, have the option of trying out Adrian Secord's weighted Voronoi stippler [1].

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