Book Image

Design Made Easy with Inkscape

By : Christopher Rogers
1 (1)
Book Image

Design Made Easy with Inkscape

1 (1)
By: Christopher Rogers

Overview of this book

With the power and versatility of the Inkscape software, making charts, diagrams, illustrations, and UI mockups with infinite resolution becomes enjoyable. If you’re looking to get up to speed with vector illustration in no time, this comprehensive guide has got your back! Design Made Easy with Inkscape is easy to follow and teaches you everything you need to know to create graphics that you can use and reuse forever, for free! You’ll benefit from the author’s industry experience as you go over the basics of vector illustration, discovering tips and tricks for getting professional graphics done fast by leveraging Inkscape's powerful toolset. This book teaches by example, using a great variety of use cases from icons and logos to illustration, web design, and product design. You’ll learn about hotkeys and take a best-practices approach developed over ten years of using Inkscape as a design tool in production. What’s more, this book also includes links to free graphics resources that you can use in all your projects. Whether you’re a new user or a professional, by the end of this book, you’ll have full understanding of how to use Inkscape and its myriad of excellent features to make stunning graphics for your projects.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Part 1: Finding Your Way Around
7
Part 2: Advanced Shape Editing
13
Part 3: Inkscape’s Power Tools

Clone management using clones of clones

Once we get into more complex combinations of clones, we will want a good way to manage them. After all, if we happen to ungroup or delete our original cloned object accidentally, Inkscape will silently unlink our clones, and we will lose the ability to change them all at the same time.

This is why we will generally group the original, put a rectangle behind that with a label, then move it off the canvas, so it’s out of the way of the main design. Figure 10.8 shows what this looks like.

Figure 10.8 – Drawing a rectangle, labeling and grouping the original clone to move it off canvas

Figure 10.8 – Drawing a rectangle, labeling and grouping the original clone to move it off canvas

As you can see, the warning instructions and box show at a glance what’s going on, so there’s never any question as to what needs to be done (or not done, in this case).

This is even more useful when we start making clones of clones. Take, for example, our logo symbol, logo name, and tagline; we will...