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Design Made Easy with Inkscape

You're reading from   Design Made Easy with Inkscape A practical guide to your journey from beginner to pro-level vector illustration

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801078771
Length 360 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Christopher Rogers Christopher Rogers
Author Profile Icon Christopher Rogers
Christopher Rogers
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Finding Your Way Around
2. Chapter 1: The Inkscape Interface FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Moving and Styling Shapes 4. Chapter 3: Drawing Shapes with the Shape Tools 5. Chapter 4: Automatic Shape Alignment in Inkscape 6. Chapter 5: Node Editing – Modifying Your Shapes with Nodes and Curves 7. Part 2: Advanced Shape Editing
8. Chapter 6: Fast Shape Editing with Path Operations and the Shape Builder Tool 9. Chapter 7: Using Text in Inkscape 10. Chapter 8: Advanced Shading and Coloring 11. Chapter 9: Clips and Masks 12. Chapter 10: Automation with Clones and Linked Files 13. Part 3: Inkscape’s Power Tools
14. Chapter 11: Organization Using Layers 15. Chapter 12: Live Path Effects 16. Chapter 13: Filters and Extensions 17. Chapter 14: Vectorizing with Trace Bitmap 18. Chapter 15: Document Properties, Pages, Exporting, and Printing 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Vectorizing to black with the Single scan tab

The simplest method of vectorizing with Trace Bitmap is using a black-and-white or high-contrast image. Once you have your image on a canvas (by dragging the image from your filesystem onto the canvas, or using File > Import), you simply select the image and then select Path > Trace Bitmap. This brings up the Trace Bitmap dialog, as shown in Figure 14.2.

Figure 14.2 – The Trace Bitmap dialog

Figure 14.2 – The Trace Bitmap dialog

Using the Single scan tab, and Detection mode set to Brightness cutoff, we get a black-and-white preview at the bottom of the dialog. Note that since our logo bitmap is colored with gradients, some of the preview is missing.

This is because Brightness cutoff uses the Threshold value to determine where the brightness cutoff should be. Smaller values closer to 0.0 will capture only the darkest areas of the image, and values closer to 1.0 will capture lighter and lighter colors. Since some parts of our logo...

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