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- == BLURRED SHADOWS VIA BITMAPS
-
- The "Make a Bitmap Copy" command (Alt+B) exports a bitmap of
- the selected objects (with all other objects hidden), saves it as a
- PNG file in the same directory as the document, and imports it
- back into the document.
-
- Via prefs, you can specify an external filter that will be run on the
- PNG file after it is exported but before it is imported back. I use
- this for grayscaling and blurring the image to create a soft drop
- shadow for any object. So for me, Alt+B creates a shadow for
- selected objects, and you can set it up to work the same for you.
-
- The script itself is share/extensions/inkscape-shadow.sh, though
- it's not integrated nto the extensions or plugin system in any way.
- The script requires Imagemagick 6.x to be installed; you can
- modify the script as you like, probably adapting it for effects
- other than shadows. The script is Unix-only; you can create
- a similar batch file for Windows if you need it (send it to us
- if you do).
-
- To enable this, you set in your ~/.inkscape/preferences.xml:
-
- <group
- id="createbitmap"
- minsize="250"
- filter="/full/path/to/inkscape-shadow.sh"
- filter_param1="20" />
-
- Here minsize= gives the minimum size of the generated bitmap in
- pixels (regardless of the object size); alternatively you can specify
- resolution= to set the constant resolution (different pixel size
- for different object sizes).
-
- In filter=, you specify either the full path to the script, or just
- "inkscape-shadow.sh" if the script is in your PATH. The script
- receives the image filename as the first parameter and the
- filter_param1 as the second parameter (more parameters can be
- added). This particular script interprets that as the blur radius
- in pixels, but of course that depends on the script you use.
-
- The inkscape-shadow-white.sh script is the same but creates all-white
- blurred shadows ("glows") instead of all-black.
-
- NOTE: I'm not going to provide a GUI for the blurred shadows feature,
- for these reasons:
-
- 1. You have to carry around the shadow PNGs along your SVG. It's
- inconvenient, and the PNGs may be much larger than the SVG.
-
- 2. The shadows are not resolution-independent and are not updated
- automatically. For all this, we need to support the gaussian blur SVG
- filter (a standard SVG feature). But since we don't have any filter
- support yet, hence this hack.
-
- 3. Both Batik and Adobe have (different) problems with displaying PNGs
- with alpha transparency. (Much like the Internet Exploder - shame on
- them! :) This means that while this is valid SVG, its usefulness is
- pretty much limited to Inkscape only.
-
- Still, for those who desperately need blurred shadows right now (such
- as myself), this feature works well enough. Try it out, it's fun.
-
-