If you can't help, don't post.Here you go, I did this using Paint.NET.
Paint.net is for people who are rookies experts use gimp.
brofist
Unless you want it done quick and easy.Otherwise,
Hold on I forgot to mention gimp might be for experts but professionals use photoshop.
GIMP and PS are equal.
Photoshop has 3D image editing, video animation painting and editing, plus automated technical/medical image measurements that are well beyond the scope of GIMP. In addition, Photoshop comes with a very capable image browser called Bridge that acts as an organizing center for all the images and other resources used in Photoshop edits. GIMP does not have such a closely integrated organizer/browser. GIMP does not. GIMP has specialty commands such as Keyboard Shortcuts, Dialogs, and Units. The latter two support instant opening of all of GIMP's dialogs and setting the GIMP units of measurement. But clearly GIMP does not support the range of devices from which Photoshop can import, including video and one of the widest ranges of camera raw files. Couple this with the Camera Raw dialog (shades of LightRooms Develop command) and Photoshop clearly bests GIMP and we have not yet considered the Photoshop Printing options and the Automate and Scripts commands. Now some of the Automate options such as Batch or PDF Presentations have GIMP counterparts, but these GIMP dialogs are not nearly as powerful as Photoshop's. In scripting, Photoshop again has more options with VB, JavaScript, and Actions while GIMP has Script-FU which gets at the basic GIMP programming structure. But the bottom line is that the infrastructure the Photoshop supports through its file commands gives users many more options and choices than GIMP. The really important difference being the new animation, video, and camera raw support in Photoshop Extended (the first 2 are not standard Photoshop features). GIMP compares reasonably well to Adobe Photoshop Elements and Corel Paintshop Pro but is no match here for Photoshop.