Weekly recap — 9 November 2025

Not much interesting was happening the past few weeks, so this is a multi-week recap. Highlights: release candidates planned for GIMP, Ardour, and FreeCAD; new releases of LSP plugins, new technical preview of Audacity 4.0.

GIMP

The team is getting ready for the first release candidate of v3.2. This means some interesting features in the works are being postponed till v3.4. One such example is vector masks. Some patches may still come through, though, such as merging paths.

Some neat minor new features merged recently:

  • Exporting patterns of fill and stroke in vector layers.
  • Pasting unformatted text in the Text tool.
  • Importing of PVR textures.

Krita

Dmitry Kazakov recently merged HDR support for Wayland to Krita Next. So far, this has been tested on KWin only.

Inkscape

Martin Owens recently added a new UI for changing the paint order in the Fill’n’Stroke dock:

Meanwhile, the GSoC artwork recolor project by Fatma Omara has been merged and will be part of the next release.

Tavmjong Bah started working on adding support for all color font formats.

FreeCAD

The project has been slowly arriving at the first release candidate of version 1.1. There are fewer than 10 release blockers lately, so we may still see the final release in 2025.

At the moment, there are over 300 pull requests, both open and in draft. A huge part of those are scheduled for inclusion in v1.2, which means a busy post-release time.

Ardour

The Ardour team is getting really close to the first release candidate of v9.0. Upcoming changes include things like much-requested pianoroll windows (see below on the screenshot), a bottom panel editing area for regions and cue clips, cue recording, and various UX/UI improvements.

Most recently, Paul added MIDI note brushing (coming to v9.0, and Robin has been working on a reimplementation of mix tools from Mixbus (probably coming to v9.1 or so).

Audacity 4.0alpha2

This is still more of a technical preview, but with improvements:

  • Allow track range selection with Shift-Enter.
  • Record from anywhere.
  • Export loop region.
  • Preference for paste behavior: overlapping other clips vs pushing them.
  • Preference for whether clicking on the ruler should trigger playback

Go get it here if you are curious.

LSP Plugins 1.2.25

This is mainly a bugfix update for another recent release, where Vladimir Sadovnikov implemented a Ring-Modulated sidechain plugin series (regular and multiband), A/B preset switching support, integrated loudness metering for Referencer plugin series, and other great new features and improvements.

See here for release notes and downloads.

Easy Effects 8.0.0

This is a very exciting and yet not very well-known project that simplifies using global audio effects on Linux, among other things. Wellington Wallace et al. released this new version with a port from GTK4 to Qt/QNL-based user interface.

Other changes include:

  • Built-in tray icon and menu.
  • Better echo cancellation.
  • Various preset improvements.
  • The last used plugin or tab is now restored when the window is reopened.

For the full list of changes, please see here. The recommended way to install it is from Flathub.

Artworks

Shaman House by Dahyun kal, made with a plethora of tools, including Blender:

Awakening by Javen Yuan, made with Zbrush, Blender, and Photoshop:

The Silent Geometry by Sathish Kumar, made with Blender and Photoshop:

神秘小鎮 (Mysterious Town) by 魔灯Modeng, made with Blender, Maya, Zbrush, etc.:

Vampire Castle of Tanagari by Dimitris Tsilavakis, made with Blender and Krita:

Thanks to all patrons!


This is a companion discussion topic for the original entry at https://librearts.org/2025/10/week-recap-9-november-2025/
1 Like

Hello Alexandre!

Just out of curiosity…
What is your personal “techninal” opinion on the “superiority” of the QT toolkit compared to the GTK one?
As an aside, QT licence is more restrictive (for commercial use) compared to the GTK one but I am not interested in these “legal” aspects…

Personally, I suppose one important advantage for QT is that there are big companies, hiring full time developers, to work on it. I might be totally wrong but I have come to the conclusion that, for instance, Red Hat is no longer supporting the GTK development (as it did in the past).
In addition, more developers allow also for better documentation (tutorials).

In addition, for mobile platforms (e.g. Android), thanks to the leverage of QML, it is easier to port your code (compared again to the GKT one)

In your weekly recap update you mentioned, for instance, Easy Effects which has moved from GTK to QT.
Audacity 4.0 will be ported to QT as well (previously it was based on the wxPython toolkit, not gtk).

All major open source graphic softwares are still running on GTK3 (GIMP, darktable, RawTherapee-ART).
Inkscape hired a full time developer, for a few months. to port their code from GTK3 to 4.
However, watching Martin Owens videos on YouTube or reading his Patreon updates it looks like there are still many bugs to iron out especially as regards GTK4 running on Windows and Mac. Again mostly due to the lack of resources and developers.
Lately, darktable has been slowly moving to GKT4 as well (which will take many months, I suppose…)

Sorry for the long ramble and, especiallly, for some faulty conclusion of mine :slight_smile:
Please, feel free to correct me…

I don’t have much of a personal technical opinion, because I’m not a developer. Also, let’s keep in mind that Krita is a Qt application and will continue to be one, so I probably wouldn’t generalize :slight_smile:

There are not many complex GTK3/GTK4-based applications. Some developers seem to be unhappy with the toolkit (Dune3D/Horizon EDA dev), some started moving away from it (Zrythm), and others have already completed the GTK-to-Qt transition (gLabels).

Some complex GTK3/GTK4 applications I’ve seen and used have UIs with blown-up sidebars (Siril, Minder). I’ve seen UI designs in Qt that are not great in that sense, but there seem to be fewer of those. It’s entirely possible that GTK imposes a particular approach to design that doesn’t sit well with both developers and users.

As for Audacity, I’m not surprised Muse started moving it to Qt, because wxWidgets is not great, and they already have reusable solutions from MuseScore Desktop.

Qt has better documentation and is easier to develop with, there’s no debate there. For new apps, unless you’re developing specifically for the GNOME platform, Qt would be the better choice.