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    Trace of line drawings

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    • syllieS Offline
      syllie @b77
      last edited by syllie

      @b77 Yes, but that is not exactly what 'we' want.

      Typically a collection is created with a limited palette (4-18 colours). Colour groups come in handy.

      Then the recolor artwork tool is used to shuffle colour combinations within that pallete around for all objects in the design. The purpose is not to 'edit' colours persay, but also to just to shuffle the ones that we have already created for a collection around (background from light yellow, to pink, motif pink to light yellow etc). It is the ideal way to experiment with colourways.

      • Locking a colour in place (when the combination is 'almost' right) is very handy in AI too.

      • The recolor tool can also be used to consolidate print colours, for example if an original design has 12 colours to group and minimize the number of colors used in a design when it is printed on different medium (for example tissue paper allowing only 4 colours).

      • Yes we can 'select similar' (with multiple clicks) and then reassign colors from presets/palettes but you need to use intermediate colours if you want to move yellow to another object/shape for example. Recolor is MADE for this.

      • Yes we can edit (global) colours - but we have the colours already in our palette

      https://youtu.be/BuvbK_MPuYA?t=167

      Note:

      • a 'collection' is typical 8-12 prints (but can be larger)
      • in a collection the same motif/pattern can exist, but in different colourways

      0_1681261849917_def482fd-694b-492f-a366-25169c2f77c3-image.png

      Windows 10 Pro | 22H2

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • VectorStylerV Offline
        VectorStyler @syllie
        last edited by

        @syllie Yes, I think the "Gray Sketch" and a Tolerance of about 0.5 is the best way to go to get the fills out of this image.

        For a bit more control, open the "More Options" in the Image Trace panel menu, and in the Options tab, set 12 for the Window and 70% for Smoothness.
        Trying different values of the Window and Smoothness might improve the result a bit.

        Another thing that might be useful here is to turn off the Extract Fill and turn on the Extract Stroke options (using the above options). This will try to produce single curves (not filled areas).

        A higher resolution image would help a lot.

        syllieS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • syllieS Offline
          syllie @VectorStyler
          last edited by

          @VectorStyler Thank you for the tips! I will give that a go.

          The original was scanned at 300dpi (the link to dropbox), but granted, the artwork is a bit tiny for this purpose. I could run it through Gigapixel, but my first aim was to get a scan at least as good as Inkscape.

          I found this list of vectorizing tools too - VectorStyler is on there (albeit with the wrong price tag (duration)). https://github.com/fromtheexchange/image2svg-awesome

          Windows 10 Pro | 22H2

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • S Offline
            Subpath
            last edited by Subpath

            @syllie

            two things related to pattern design

            first
            "Colorize" might be interesting for you
            (Menu > Effects > Replace Colors > Colorize).
            If you create a color palette with colors you like.
            You can select this color palette and distribute the colors
            from this palette randomly onto selected objects.

            Unfortunately, the colored panel is not "non-modal", you have
            to to close the panel to confirm it and open it again.
            To make this easier, I made myself a little toolbar
            with "Colorize" in it.

            Here a video to see how it works in VS

            0_1681280581861_colorize-1.png
            .
            .
            second
            I am already working on a tutorial on how to create
            seamless patterns in VectorStyler. Would take yet some time.
            (I have already created a tutorial on how to create patterns with
            Clipping shapes, which can be found under Tutorials).

            Here a teaser Pic from the coming seamless Pattern Tutorial
            0_1681280148149_Teaser seamless pattern.png

            Win 11
            CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 9600X, 6-core.
            GPU: Nvidia Geforce RTX 5070.

            syllieS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
            • syllieS Offline
              syllie @Subpath
              last edited by

              @Subpath said in Trace of line drawings:

              "Colorize" might be interesting for you

              Thank you - that is sort of an interesting option. I may not have much use for this type of redistribution as it has a chance to assign the same colour to multiple objects without further control (I prefer the consolidate colours option from recolor here).

              I have been making patterns for a while with VS. Looking forward to your tutorial - I wrote one for Inkscape a long time ago http://web.archive.org/web/20110312191844/http://verysimpledesigns.com/vectors/inkscape-tutorial-seamless-patterns.html

              I am sorta contemplating to restore my site (I have rebuild it in WordPress already but the content needs a refresh) and post tuts for both Inkscape and VS on there. Currently still thinking about it as it would be a significant timesink, but I believe in VS (and Inkscape - although they still lack many features and have a lot of things that I have less need for 🙂 ).

              Windows 10 Pro | 22H2

              S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • S Offline
                Subpath @syllie
                last edited by

                @syllie
                if you find the time, it would be nice
                if you could create a little video on how
                you recolor in Illustrator, also don't know yet a
                way in VS

                I was thinking along the lines of having a bunch
                of selected shapes and having a palette and then
                having a function that assigns the colors of that
                palette to the shapes one by one

                Win 11
                CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 9600X, 6-core.
                GPU: Nvidia Geforce RTX 5070.

                syllieS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • syllieS Offline
                  syllie @Subpath
                  last edited by

                  @Subpath It actually works partially in VS, I will find the time to make a quick demo.

                  The AI way is pretty well demonstrated in this video that I also posted above: https://youtu.be/BuvbK_MPuYA?t=167

                  Windows 10 Pro | 22H2

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • H Offline
                    Harry
                    last edited by

                    @syllie said in Trace of line drawings:

                    One of the tools that is super-handy is the 'replace color' (or AI's recolor artwork) function as you can imagine a lot of these kind of pattern collections implement several colourways. This feature and CMYK mode support are totally lacking from Inkscape, making it a no-subsitute (as all-in-one solution).

                    Inkscape 1.3alpha0 - development version - supports CMYK. It has many new features including a pattern editor:

                    https://inkscape.org/release/inkscape-1.3/?latest=1

                    Win 11, XP Pen Deco 01 V2 graphic tablet

                    syllieS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • syllieS Offline
                      syllie @Subpath
                      last edited by syllie

                      @Subpath It is a bit primitive - but regarding the colour shuffle you should get the idea from the vid.

                      Basically you can swap existing colours in a design (manually) or by using the shuffle color order option.
                      You can add colours into the mix that do not exist in the design itself

                      https://recordit.co/wjISo1wCvq

                      Also you can reduce colours in the design by consolidating them (and the shuffle still works after that):
                      https://recordit.co/MWMJM9qQkO

                      Note that the artwork needs to be selected, the feature exist under Effects > Replace Colors > Replace Colors (I made a custom toolbox for one click access)

                      Note that this feature is very powerful (when fully functional) and you should be able to swap colours based on colour harmonies, hue, saturation etc. It is super handy to experiment with colours (whilst for my purpose I stay within an exact palette, this of course is not necessary at all)

                      Windows 10 Pro | 22H2

                      S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • syllieS Offline
                        syllie @Harry
                        last edited by

                        @Harry Thanks! Total Inkscape fan and totally up to speed with it's development (using it since 2008 and ran a tutorial site for it for more than 10 years) CMYK is actually a little bit of an issue still but they are working on it. I follow Martin Owens (patreon) for development updates.

                        Windows 10 Pro | 22H2

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • S Offline
                          Subpath @syllie
                          last edited by

                          @syllie

                          thank a lot for taking the time
                          these are really helpful videos 👍

                          Win 11
                          CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 9600X, 6-core.
                          GPU: Nvidia Geforce RTX 5070.

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