

Now bring back your magnifying glass and crayon, and arrange them where you want them, with the clip under the magnifying glass. This saves only the part of the crayon inside the circle, and even rounds off the part that will be covered by the magnifying glass. Position the circle over the bigger crayon, choose them both, then click Object > Clip > Set. Make it bigger but still not as big as your circle. First I apply a bend effect and then rotate copies. Now we're going to work our magic on these two objects. In this tutorial I show how Inkscape's live path effects can be combined. Then duplicate your object, in my case the crayon, and move it to the side. Now, make a circle the same size as your magnifying glass, and move your magnifying glass to the side. (The purple circle is only there to show the gradient.) Mine was already there. Tips to Avoid Performance Issues(slowdowns, freezing, crashing) 4.

What To Do When Tools Are Drawing Invisible Objects(or No Longer Working as Before) 2.
INKSCAPE TUTORIALS MAGIC HOW TO
To make it look like there's glass in it, just add a white fill that's almost transparent, and change it to a white to clear linear gradient. These tutorials teach how to use specific tools or features. You might just use a circle with no fill and a black stroke of 6 or 8, and some black ellipses to make the handle. The magnifying glass I chose had a clear center and a bit of white in it indicating glass… if yours isn't clear in the center, you should be able to make one that is. It uses clipart of a magnifying glass and an object of your choice. Inkscape Tutorial: Create A Magnifying Effect
