![]() ![]() Other logos would be more difficult to vectorize if you don’t have a decent source image. I have to say, this was possible thanks to the logo being simple. For this case I just used different polygons created with the Beizer curves tool, and joined ( Path->Union) or subtracted ( Path->Difference) from my shape until I was happy with the result. This tweaking is performed manually with some time of work. Now it comes to the painful realization that the logo is not clean at all, and it needs tweaking. Now we finally have something half useful. To do so, select all the layers and run the Path->Union process. To avoid working with so many layers, we’ll join the result into a single united layer. Once I have a set of layers that resemble the logo, I paint them all the same color (black in this case) to easily discern the shape that its taking. This creates a layer for each color (or similar), resulting in a good amount of layers.įrom the set layers I can just remove the background layers (white, whiteish) ending with a simpler version of the logo. The first step I perform is to trace using a full color tracing. You can judge for yourself, but it seems to be some kind of jar with pickled stuff in it. Being a stamp, It is full of jitter, places with no ink, and to add injury, I just took a photo of it. The easiest way is to use a raster image editor like GIMP, add an alpha channel, select the white color, delete and save to PNG file - ready to compose. Vectorising the Debian logoĪs an easy example I’ll grab the classic Debian logo and pass it through Inkscape. ![]() I’m not an expert on tracing, so I treat this tool as a black box with knobs and lights, twisting and changing until I get the best result.
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