[gimp-web/testing] Fix typos and spelling



commit eb4434f2446ae26c9cec4af6eb2468eb03d1ca84
Author: Pat David <patdavid gmail com>
Date:   Mon May 9 14:57:19 2016 -0500

    Fix typos and spelling

 content/news/2016-05-05 Tutorials Revamp.md |    4 ++--
 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/content/news/2016-05-05 Tutorials Revamp.md b/content/news/2016-05-05 Tutorials Revamp.md
index 03125a5..88667c4 100644
--- a/content/news/2016-05-05 Tutorials Revamp.md       
+++ b/content/news/2016-05-05 Tutorials Revamp.md       
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ We have a tutorial [template][tt], and you can find the markdown file used to ge
 [tt]: /tutorials/template/
 [in git]: https://git.gnome.org/browse/gimp-web/plain/content/tutorials/template/index.md
 
-We can use tutorials of all types and skill levels, so don't feel intimidated by what you might see on the 
current tutorials page.  Indeed many common questions we see might have solutions that are not obvious to 
others - the perfect opportunity to write a tutorial about it!  We'll absolutely consier all proposed 
tutorials.
+We can use tutorials of all types and skill levels, so don't feel intimidated by what you might see on the 
current tutorials page.  Indeed many common questions we see might have solutions that are not obvious to 
others - the perfect opportunity to write a tutorial about it!  We'll absolutely consider all proposed 
tutorials.
 
 
 
@@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ The GEGL <i>Exposure</i> dialog.
 </figcaption>
 </figure>
 
-The tutorial covers a method for adding exposure compensation to an image's shadows and midtones while 
retaining highlight details.  She does this using _Exposure_ and combining the results with a mask based on a 
grayscale version of the working image (simliar to using a [luminosity mask][]).
+The tutorial covers a method for adding exposure compensation to an image's shadows and midtones while 
retaining highlight details.  She does this using _Exposure_ and combining the results with a mask based on a 
grayscale version of the working image (similar to using a [luminosity mask][]).
 This is also one of the first tutorials using the high bit depth version of GIMP.  Head over to the 
[tutorials][tuts] page and have a look:
 
 [luminosity mask]: /tutorials/Luminosity_Masks/


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