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    How to configure the image tracer?

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    • RaaskotR Offline
      Raaskot @VectorStyler
      last edited by

      @VectorStyler
      Thanks. I think it a better quality should be achieved. The resolution is the same for the test in Vectormagic. Too bad if one have to license 3rd part vectorizer to make this.

      Do you have a link to a tracing guide in the documentation?

      VectorStylerV S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • VectorStylerV Offline
        VectorStyler @Raaskot
        last edited by

        @Raaskot

        https://vectorstyler.com/documentation/shapes/tracing/

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

          @Raaskot

          I think it's not that easy to achieve better tracing quality
          inside of vector graphics app.

          Vector Magic seems to have been specifically designed for tracing.

          Incidentally, one of the best image tracing programs I've ever used
          was this one. I haven't seen anything that comes close.
          And I'm not easily impressed.

          https://www.vectorstyler.com/forum/topic/3101/ai-vectorizer

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

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • M Offline
            marce @VectorStyler
            last edited by

            @VectorStyler Hi! following the thread. I made some testing, im not figuring which preset is the more accurated vectorizing text of well defined shapes. I typed the same that Raaskot, and saved as high res image, but cant get an accurate trace of it.0_1765729210017_letras.jpg
            The closer trace of this image is using the "photographic" preset, but it has some distortions on it:
            0_1765729303849_b6c9c851-1855-426d-847e-84f3853a8ce4-image.png

            Im interested. I see lot of options in the trace "more options" but feel a little lost. Documentations states that the best is to use presets. Im costumed -im sorry to compare with other software, i know is not nice, but i feel could help- inkscape tracing that by default gives accuracy that can easily be softened or not. In the screenshot is shown results without smooth.
            0_1765729686985_dc9fef1b-dc78-4326-ac04-a45517396c37-image.png
            0_1765729702680_bc7a7ab3-5afd-4c49-85a8-e213f0a7645a-image.png
            In this result you got a single shape easily editable by the nodes, that you can simplify easily, or smooth.
            Im not quite sure how this can be achieved with VS trace, that looks powerfull, but a little bit complex to me.

            Ryzen 9 3900X on Asus prime x570-p
            Memory 48gb ddr4
            Nvidia gtx 970 on an Asus strix, 4gb gddr5
            NVMe CT100p 1TB

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            • S Offline
              Subpath
              last edited by Subpath

              @Raaskot , @marce

              Back in the days, I would trace such bitmaps by hand.
              I used also the Corel Image Tracer, but it wasn't always helpful.

              One way I see to potentially alleviate the problem is to use an image
              upscaler, which allows for a higher resolution and might therefore produce
              better results in VS.

              Here's a very good, free one.
              https://www.vectorstyler.com/forum/topic/3033/upscayl-win-mac-free-open-source-upscaler/7

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

              M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • M Offline
                marce @Subpath
                last edited by

                @Subpath Well, i used a very high res image, you say it will improve using something so big?

                Ryzen 9 3900X on Asus prime x570-p
                Memory 48gb ddr4
                Nvidia gtx 970 on an Asus strix, 4gb gddr5
                NVMe CT100p 1TB

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                • S Offline
                  Subpath @marce
                  last edited by

                  @marce

                  Well, I don't know the Resolution.
                  But whether it brings an improvement can easily be determined by trying it out.

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

                  M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • M Offline
                    marce @Subpath
                    last edited by marce

                    @Subpath said in How to configure the image tracer?:

                    @marce

                    Well, I don't know the Resolution.
                    But whether it brings an improvement can easily be determined by trying it out.

                    Hi Subpath. I made a test. With low res image to high res. It is here. Even the results are better, always is added some distortion:

                    https://icedrive.net/s/ZF5TyWig1T56gW32TFW1C792WkRV

                    0_1765737368857_5902ac77-3235-442c-a684-5c2c5d088459-image.png

                    Ryzen 9 3900X on Asus prime x570-p
                    Memory 48gb ddr4
                    Nvidia gtx 970 on an Asus strix, 4gb gddr5
                    NVMe CT100p 1TB

                    M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • M Offline
                      marce @marce
                      last edited by marce

                      @marce said in How to configure the image tracer?:

                      @Subpath said in How to configure the image tracer?:

                      @marce

                      Well, I don't know the Resolution.
                      But whether it brings an improvement can easily be determined by trying it out.

                      Hi Subpath. I made a test. With low res image to high res. It is here. Even the results are better, always is added some distortion:

                      https://icedrive.net/s/ZF5TyWig1T56gW32TFW1C792WkRV

                      I made the same test with inkscape to take some reference. The accuracy improves a little with higher rest, but is not so dependent as can be seen here:

                      https://icedrive.net/s/kDgWzBfiXwVWwXNAVABPFwCNwG7G

                      0_1765737430786_03038178-bc17-4900-a6c5-1c0e8969f75e-image.png

                      Ryzen 9 3900X on Asus prime x570-p
                      Memory 48gb ddr4
                      Nvidia gtx 970 on an Asus strix, 4gb gddr5
                      NVMe CT100p 1TB

                      S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • S Offline
                        Subpath @marce
                        last edited by Subpath

                        @marce

                        Well, when I talk about better resolution, I mean the difference between the
                        left and the right side. Significantly less jagged edges.

                        The part on the right is magnified 4x using Upscayler.
                        Which can magnify up to 16x.

                        0_1765740368121_Unterschied.png
                        .
                        .
                        .
                        Here's my tracing result from Corel Tracer based on
                        the 4x magnified image. I choose "Logo" as the tracing mode.

                        0_1765740411959_corel Tracer.png
                        .
                        .
                        .
                        By the way, since "sd" is repeated, I only enlarged and traced those
                        two letters.

                        0_1765740573625_sd_upscayl_4x_upscayl-standard-4x.png

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

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                        • M Offline
                          marce @Subpath
                          last edited by marce

                          @Subpath Nice results in Corel. Minimum amount of Nodes, and a very editable shape. In inkscape -i take it as reference, since their trace module is very good imho- this is are the results of the very low image you shared:
                          0_1765742689021_6dc862d4-ef8c-45b7-a775-15dd4d52def2-image.png
                          Must said, are very good, taking account of the low res source.
                          Using the good res last image you uploaded, tweaking the smooth corners and optimize, i got similar results in inkscape to Corel:
                          0_1765742844428_f78e40d3-1534-45b5-ba58-dbe56c7cd3a7-image.png

                          So, i believe that really is not necessary so high res images as source, but some kind of optimization of the trace process in VS.

                          Ryzen 9 3900X on Asus prime x570-p
                          Memory 48gb ddr4
                          Nvidia gtx 970 on an Asus strix, 4gb gddr5
                          NVMe CT100p 1TB

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                          • S Offline
                            Subpath @marce
                            last edited by

                            @marce

                            I would say you need both.
                            High resolution, to me, means the smoothest possible contours,
                            as jagged outlines negatively affect the result of a tracing.

                            I haven't spent much time with VS Tracer yet. But I think the results
                            may also be improved by adjusting the settings a bit.

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

                            M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • M Offline
                              marce @Subpath
                              last edited by marce

                              @Subpath Well, low res images are better in some cases. Look in the sample below. This is an old scanned Capital letter β€”from etc.usf.edu. The original source is very rough. In the case you want to conserve the original roughnes is ok to use the High Res image. But if you want a smooth and flowing drawing, a low res will make the trick. The first Z at the right, in red, is a nice result, and it comes from the low res image. The High res trace result is exact, but not what i want, that is, a kind of vectorizing photo retouching.
                              0_1765745188743_8450fda1-b2b7-4a5a-8bbf-6bcb6c75cfcb-image.png
                              This both results are using the same settings, in inkscape, but the change is the resolution of the source image.

                              Ryzen 9 3900X on Asus prime x570-p
                              Memory 48gb ddr4
                              Nvidia gtx 970 on an Asus strix, 4gb gddr5
                              NVMe CT100p 1TB

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

                                @marce

                                Well, that's due to the smoothing algorithm of the vector tracer. I think a slightly
                                better result could perhaps be achieved with the high-resolution version using
                                slightly different settings for smoothing.

                                I would have vectorized the template you created here by tracing a simple line
                                in the middle of the contour (Corel Trace has a mode for this) and then
                                assigning an appropriate line weight.

                                I've created a lot of bitmap traces professionally (in digital printing).
                                Many by hand, because the trace results were too poor. I can't recall a
                                single instance where I would have preferred a low-resolution bitmap
                                version if I had the choice.

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

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                                • RaaskotR Offline
                                  Raaskot
                                  last edited by Raaskot

                                  @VectorStyler
                                  @marce
                                  @Subpath

                                  Just to let you know, that I appreciate your input a lot. It gave me some ideas what to try out ie. using upscalers.

                                  I gave up Inkscape for VS back then (mainly due to supported color profiles and more familiar UI), but remember that the autotracer performed quite nicely.

                                  Thanks😊

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

                                    @Raaskot

                                    your always welcome
                                    nice to hear that this ideas was helpful

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

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