
Ok, the solution I'm choosing now as it seems is creating a pixel opacity mask in Inkscape by exporting a white on black version of the logo. In the mask the lines are a little thicker than the actually are supposed to be, to not get the anti alias of the edges. The great thing is that I can make it very high resolution, because it's nice to compress since it's only black and white. It's a horrible way of doing it, I know, but I think it's the only way. And I actually assume in a PDF it would be like that anyways.
Maybe this approach helps some of you, maybe you come up with a better idea for me :)
Cheers!
David
On Mon, 2007-08-20 at 09:38 +0200, David Christian Berg wrote:
I'm not sure, but couldn't you simply import the SVG into Illustrator to generate the EPS or PDF in CMYK color-space?
That would be too easy. I loose all the transparency gradients when opening the SVG in Illustrator CS2. I'll try with CS3 soon at uni, but I'm not too confident. Another idea I hat yesterday was converting the gradients to black and white gradients and use this as an opacity mask afterwards. Don't yet know, if it works, though and if I manage to change all the gradients easily.
Any other ideas?
Thanks!
David
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