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Inkscape drawing with bamboo
Inkscape drawing with bamboo





inkscape drawing with bamboo inkscape drawing with bamboo inkscape drawing with bamboo

Thanks for your detailed reply! I'm not a programmer, but I could sort of follow your SVG code example and rationale, which I think is in keeping with what Wacom's Inkspace app seems to be doing when exporting an SVG file (specific coordinates creating filled shapes with a black #000000 colour). Thus I don't see much which can be done here other than that. When you import such an SVG file into AD it will show all curves as 1pt thick ones and you would have to alter all those settings accordingly (or for certain selected ones here) in order to change their thickness. So that seems here to be the way Wacom's Inkspace app exports or generates then it's SVG code, it tracks the pen coordinates and everything is written as cubic Bezier curves. The d attribute contains the drawing commands, where M signals a "move to" command and the C signals an "curveto" (Cubic Bezier curve) command etc. Note: that all drawing with the element is specified inside the d="." attribute. PS there may be an answer in the thread below ('line width is not yet fully supported in the SVG standard'), but I'd like to confirm if something can be done about this using Affinity Designer? I am attaching an image to illustrate my problem.Īny thoughts on how to convert these shapes into strokes so that I could make them thinner? The shapes are thicker than the original paper lines, losing most of the line width variance, and I cannot find a way to reduce the width as you would with a stroke. My problem is that the SVG files exported from Wacom's Inkspace app are filled black shapes instead of strokes. The Slate's ballpoint pen is marketed as having 1024 levels of pressure which in theory seems a bit much for a ballpoint pen, but would be nice if it could reproduce the light and heavy strokes you have made on paper. I am drawing on a Wacom Bamboo Slate, which can export your drawings (and writing via a kind of OCR) to text, image formats and SVG. Here's Wacom's specs for the Slate:







Inkscape drawing with bamboo