![]() ![]() You must convert the Dynamic Offset effect to path and remove some nodes with the node tool. That unfortunately creates often a messy knot in a corner. One of them is to apply Path > Dynamic Offset to the outer or inner part of the broken combined path. If you search a little, you'll find plenty of tricks to create the missing midline. That's because the stroke is half of its width in a wrong place. ![]() ![]() In some cases you can simply remove the inner shape, remove or change the fill color and insert a stroke, but often the result will not look out right. It's easy in a text to refer a part with its color. I guess you want simple paths because you want to adjust line width, its style and you here and there need faint fill colors for better legibility. ![]() The result is two paths (path829 and path833) If version 2 were broken apart, the resulted paths would both have black fill color If you break it apart, you get the outline and the inner shape which had made the hole when the paths were combined.ġ) A bitmap image it's image823 in the objects panelĢ) the image as traced to vector (path825)ģ) a duplicate of 2 but the fill color is removed and a thin stroke is inserted.Ĥ) a duplicate of 3 after breaking it and moving the parts a little apart. The empty interior areas are in many cases made as combined paths. Remove the fill color, add a thin stroke and see it by yourself. Even the thinnest curve is a closed area with a fill color. In Inkscape traced lines are not simple curves. I'd add the picture of the preview so that you can see that some parts are filled with white and some are not, but I'm limited to two pictures. On this one, you can see that by decreasing the alpha value, it actually gets darker instead of transparier. On this one, you can see at the bottom that the alpha value is at 100% I'm putting some pictures to illustrate :
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