![]() Like in the top area of the top pony, we can see the page border behind the image, so we know that the background is transparent. There are some things about your screenshot that are confusing. Or otherwise, if you could explain the screenshot, so we know what we're looking at? Are both of those ponies from the same trace? Or is one a trace with background, and the other a trace without? If that's the case, then neither one of the trace results contains a background (or iow, background is transparent) otherwise we would not see the red behind it. ![]() Then below the top pony, we see 2 ponies against a red background or red rectangle. In your screenshot, what are we seeing there? The top purple pony, is that the result of the work in GIMP? That's what you imported into Inkscape? Is that what happened? You didn't happen to paste it into Inkscape did you? thanks!Ĥa - trace with Remove background checked - results in all white being removedĤb - trace with Remove background not checked - result looked like it had a background, even though it didn't have one to begin with.Ģ - exported to what file format/file type - JPG, GIF, PNG?ģ - If it was exported, or saved in any raster format, it would have had to be imported into Inkscape. ![]() "PT is a he" - awesome, just want to be sure. maybe it's a wrong method? How am I supposed to do this? :/ I've seen on YT how to do it, but the woman there had a simple black and white picture of a wing, so. But if you want to know which graphic I used - look at this (n1299468485642).jpg - the white part of eyes were removed in Inkscape - I used in Inkscape only the character with no background. I'd provide the pictures, but I deleted them It was just a practice. With "remove background" off, the picture appeared to have a background around it - even if it had no background before. With "remove background on" it removed everything white from the picture. Well, it's confusing me as well - I removed the background in GIMP - "transparent background". So maybe you did some other kind of trace? ![]() It sounds like you might have used the SIOX Foreground technique - to remove the background.but then you said it had no background. And also, what settings did you use for Trace Bitmap. Or if you don't want to show it, just clarify about the background/no background thing. So that's a little confusing.Ĭan you show us the image? A screenshot should be fine. But then you said the image had no background (the background is transparent). You said you wanted to remove the background. Shown below was zooming to 2500%.I'm not entirely clear about the situation. The advantage of a vector graphic can most rapidly be seen when we increase its size. Use "File - Save As" to save your file in SVG format.Otherwise it may appear "cropped" when viewed. If necessary, reduce size of the vectorized image (hold down CTRL to lock ratio), so that it fits on the page.We can resize or move this newly created object, delete the original image, or choose to "Object - Ungroup" in case we need to adapt shapes or colour of sub-object created. Now a vectorized image of your original bitmap will be seen on top of the bitmap. Select "Update" for a preview until settings are fine. for settings (below shown for 2 colors = "Scans" ): Select the image with the select tool ( ↖). We can import the bitmaps we had already put so much work in to Inkscape and convert them with a few mouse clicks to nice vector graphics.Ĭhoose "File - Import" to import a bitmap file. it will get aliasing artifacts on scaling (see below).īut Inkscape can do even more. The image will then remain a bitmap file, i.e. We could import an image as a bitmap object to Inkscape and save it as an SVG file. There used to be a plugin to do so but this project apparently is discontinued. GIMP v2.8 does not natively export bitmaps to SVG files.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |