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More Flourishes with Bezier Tool

flourish2
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This tutorial we will go over the Bezier Tool and using some new Spiro effects that are associated with this tool. There are several options when using just the Beier Tool. This tutorial requires Inkscape .47 which can be downloaded from the www.inkscape.org website.

Screen shot 2009-11-14 at 4.21.28 PM

You have Triangle In, Triangle Out, Elipse and Clipboard. We are going to discuss the first three and show you what each of them do.

Screen shot 2009-11-14 at 4.21.03 PM

So start creating your own flourishes and have fun!

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Create Your Own Flourishes

flourish
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Alright, in this tutorial should give you the result of a nice flourish with tapered ends that looks like a brush stroke. And after what seems like hours of messing around with it, I think I came up with a way to work it. I used the Bezier Tool to create the pattern, however this process will work using the Spiral Tool as well. I don't know if any of you have used the Spiro option associated with Bezier but it's a great option that gives you that slick look.

flourish1

This tutorial you will be able to create your own flourishes and cut them out in Sure Cuts A Lot.

Grab inkscape 47 here: (Windows)
http://thurly.net//7o4

We will use Pattern Along Path, Bezier Tool, and Spiro to create these.

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Inkscape Tutorial: How to Arch Text

ArchText
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This tutorial you will learn how to Arch your Text in Inkscape so you can import it into Sure Cuts A Lot.

If you're looking for expanding text information please click the Read More Link.
step7

We modified this idea from Kay at http://cleversomeday.wordpress.com/ which is a great place for Inkscape knowledge.

Below is Her Video Explaining: Once you have the Circular Pattern Cut, On How to Apply it to a Page.
The video is from Kay from CleverSomeday Explains how to apply this.
cleversomeday

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Creating Basic Stick Figures

stickfigurescrappy
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I put out a new video tutorial today on how to create a simple stick figure. I was emailed last week with the question "I created a file in inkscape, looks good in inkscape but cuts only cuts a single line of the shapes. I was simply going to email the lady back to tell her about the "Stroke to Path" however she filled the wrong email address when she used our contact page. So I thought a good way to approach this would be to shoot a video tutorial and maybe she will be on the look out for our next video tutorial.

stickfigure

So in this tutorial it will go over the "Stroke to Path" "Breaking Apart Joined Nodes" and it will be using a little "Bezier Tool" to get the job done. It's very basic but you can get the idea on how you can create your own( hopefully more complex figure than mine ) As you will see I'm not an artist!

Here is the video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ve0vnJ1IoI

Feel free to comment & rate it on the youtube site and if you enjoy the tutorials make sure you subscribe so you can be notified when new videos come outHappy

StickFamily

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Inkscape Tutorial - Pattern Along a Path

patternpath
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This video will demonstrate how to get a pattern to repeat itself around a path in order to create these great patterns to use with your Sure Cuts A Lot software. For this tutorial you will need to download or have installed Inkscape. If you need to download inkscape you can at www.inkscape.org

This video is presented at a beginner knowledge and in less than 2 minutes you can create these patterns that you see below using the process in the video. The video will show how to create the Red pattern.

examplepatterns

What we used in the above patterns...

The Light Blue pattern was created using a Large circle and a Smaller circle

The Dark Blue pattern was created by using the square tool with rounded corners and a Star pattern

The Red was created using a circle and the letter "O."

For written material on this method please visit : http://cuttingtime.blogspot.com/2009/08/inkscape-pattern-along-path.html

Check out this Blog to see what they created using this Tutorial!

The Artful Mama's Blog


Feel free to send us your blog so we can add it to the list if you used this tutorial to create something!

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Creating Circular Text in Inkscape

circulartext
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Sometimes you would like to create circular text to cut in SCAL or any other cutting devices. Sure Cuts A Lot can't do this with out the file being an SVG, because there isn't an option for this. We've all seen it before in Microsoft Word where you can have Circular Text or an Arch of text. Well, in this tutorial we will demonstrate how to do this in Inkscape so you can import it into SCAL.

We modified this idea from Kay at http://cleversomeday.wordpress.com/ which is a great place for inkscape and Sure Cuts A Lot software knowledge.

Below is Her Video Explaining: Once you have the Circular Pattern Cut, How to Apply it to a Page. The video is from Kay from CleverSomeday Explains how to apply this.
cleversomeday

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Create a Simple Flower in Inkscape to use in SCAL

This tutorial utilizes the "Shapes Tool" in inkscape to give us the basic outline of Flower Pedals. We then follow up with touching up with the "Node Editor." This is a great tutorial for beginners wanting to use more tools than "Trace Bitmap."

flowertutorial
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The Photo Below is what we will be creating in this tutorial.
flower

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Inkscape Tutorial: Using Outline View to Modify Your Cut

outlinetutorial
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Last week we got an email saying the following:

  • Hey guys! Big fan of SCAL myself. So far I haven't had any problems cutting anything, but today I designed a gift bag, and it has fat lines that are being double cut. I'll attach my original jpg file. The lines are one pixel wide in the file original, but they fatten up when I trace the bitmap and make it a svg in Inkscape. I can't find a way around those fat lines. Never had this happen before. I don't know if this is a common problem or if I am just stupid. Maybe you could make a tutorial about it... Thanks!

So we decided to make a tutorial based on this. Click the Photo Below to Work along with Us

Unlimited storage and Unlimited transfer for only $4.95


bag
File Donated by Kate Smith
http://craftomatic31.blogspot.com/

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Color Tracing with Inkscape

eagletutorial
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This is a tutorial for beginners. We will break apart this eagle by color so you will be able to possibly paper piece this using the Sure Cuts A Lot software.

What you will need for this tutorial.

  • Inkscape from www.inkscape.org
  • Download the eagle photo (if you want to work along side the video) - Just click the Photo Below
  • Sure Cuts A Lot - If you would like to cut your separated files.

Eagle_Football_Logo1
Click this Photo to Download

eagleapart
This is our end goal in breaking apart these colors. This technique works well with well defined areas and boarder images. The higher the quality of image the better the results.

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Tutorial: Sizing Correctly in SCAL using multiple SVG files

sizingscal
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Happy April Fools Days! When we first got SCAL we were wondering how are we going to save paper on cutting a pattern that has multi colors that needed to be cut. Well this technique that the video goes though should help you with this. The video goes though two different ways to accomplish the same goal. We know that there are other methods out there, but these two work just fine.

The reason for this tutorial is because when you import items into SCAL it isn't a 1 to 1 ratio. Meaning you will have to resize each SVG file as a whole to match all the pieces up.
This video will go over:

  • Saving your SVG files based on Color
  • Importing them into SCAL
  • Sizing them up proportionaly so that all pieces are the correct size based on your original SVG file

What we do is we separate the files by color and we have one that is saved with everything with all parts and pieces on that file. We save it as BearALL.svg.

We then stretch out the BearALL.svg in scal  to the size we want. Then we import each colored SVG  (ie BearBrown.svg) and we size up the head to match the BearALL.svg.

We do this for all the colored pieces. Another way to do proportioning on separated SVG files is...

You can place a small Star (keep it the same size)  somewhere on each of your seperated SVG file. That Star allows you to match up each file to the correct porportion  once you have imported all of your Color Separated SVG files into SCAL.
Picture 3


Once you have everything the way you want I would SAVE the project because you can delete what you are not wanting to cut, and then to get all your pieces back just go to File> Open Project

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Inkscape Tutorial: Combine and Break Apart

Sometimes you may want to break up an SVG file into multiple groups to save paper or you may just want to delete something. Well, this is a quick tutorial on how to separate the text from the stick figure so you may do two different cuts with SCAL.

Picture 2

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twocuts2
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Saving Paper for SCAL using Inkscape

This is a video tutorial.

The goal of this tutorial is to help new people that have SCAL and are new to SVG format using Inkscape. Using Inkscape you can save time and your paper by separating pieces by color. It helps when people have already have broken apart and grouped things by color for you. However in this tutorial you will see how to do this and then import and size them properly into SCAL.

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