22 May
2007
22 May
'07
1:29 a.m.
Thanks, man. Super work.
frank
Aaron Elmquist wrote:
Just two show you there are lots and lots of ways to "skin a cat" in Inkscape, here's one more example.
Used the pattern along path with lots of nodes and a negative offset to achieve the overlapped look. The broke apart/ungrouped and adjust the fills one by one.
Have fun!
On 5/21/07, *Valcke Cédric* <cvalcke@...206... mailto:cvalcke@...2250....> wrote:
Hi both, Thank you very much for those wonderful examples. It is exactly what I wanted to do and I learned a new tool (masks) on Inkscape. Cheers john cliff a écrit : > You can do something like it fairly easily with blur and masks, quick > and dirty go is attached, took about 10 minutes of playing and thats > including the really quick and dirty one I did but wasnt going to let > anyone else see :) > > Cheers > > Sim > > > > On 5/21/07, Terry Brown <terry_n_brown@...12... <mailto:terry_n_brown@...12...>> wrote: >> On Mon, 21 May 2007, Cédric Valcke wrote: >> >> > Hi all, >> > >> > Does somebody know how I could make such a thing >> > http://www.digitalz.org/images/circle_arrow.gif (linear gradient on the >> > arrows) with inkscape ? >> >> What I did in the attached was: >> >> - draw a circle >> - change it to a path >> - select all nodes then add nodes >> - break the path at each node (*) >> - 'break apart' the paths to make separate objects >> - set the end markers on all the paths to arrowheads >> - convert strokes to paths (path menu) >> - union the now detached arrow heads with the line parts >> - add gradients - don't think there's any way around doing >> those one by one >> >> You'll need to split one of the arrows so its tail can be under the >> preceeding arrow while its head is above the tail of the next. >> >> Hope that helps. >> >> (*) breaking a path at its nodes currently you have to do one node >> at a time, there's an active bug report that when fixed should allow >> you do break them all at once. >> >> Cheers -Terry >> >> > >> > Thanks