Rik posted a feature request in the Dear Xara Forum for the ability to create to give a line a gradient fill. While Xara can not do this the way other programs do there are ways to do this in Xara software.
Feel free to share your methods here!
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Rik posted a feature request in the Dear Xara Forum for the ability to create to give a line a gradient fill. While Xara can not do this the way other programs do there are ways to do this in Xara software.
Feel free to share your methods here!
- Convert the line to shape (Arrange menu).
- Apply a fill.
as Gary but duplicate/clone line first [you may want to edit it and recreate the fill later]
make an art brush [limited but should work for some simple cases]
I just draw a box, stretch it out, thin it down to a line and fill...
Am I too simple? :)
Emmeric - If it is a straight line, OK. But what if the line is curved?
Converting a line to shape is much simpler. Determine the shape. Increase or decrease the line width. Convert to Shape. Apply fill.
Once a brush is created, its application to a circle, for example, is not perfect, none of the three cap options gives a satisfactory result, unless I am missing something.Attachment 124097
HD's solution of using an art brush is the way I'd go about it.
Give the line a flat bevel and then add the gradient to the bevel. Make the line have a none thickness and adjust the bevel to suit.
That way the line is still editable as a line with the shape editor tool.
Attachment 124111
Hi Lorrain, have you tried your brush with different art brush scaling options?
Repeat along stroke (with any line cap) seemed to work for me.
Attachment 124112
Hello Jonopen,
Thank you for your comment, as I am in the middle of discovering Xara, I suspected that I had missed something! I didn't pay attention to the "Edit Brush" button, I feel a little stupid! Repeat along stroke is the solution, thank you again for taking the time to answer, have a good day.Attachment 124115
Your welcome, but never feel stupid, not on this forum :D. I've been using Xara Photo & Graphic Design for many years and I'm still discovering some of the things it can do. I think I tend to operate on a need to know basis. For example, I've still no idea what 'soft groups' are. :o
Changing the brush scaling settings can have quite a dramatic effect when using different brushes.
Attachment 124125.
The possibilities seem infinite by playing with the different settings available. I did some tests and the results are sometimes surprising, like the one of the screenshot attached to this message. It looked like sheets of paper of all colours, so I placed them in a sort of binder like there were before, to hide the rest of the brush.
Lorrain - Glad to see you learning by doing stuff. If you use a thinner width rectangle for the rainbow fill, you can get a cleaner rainbow (if that is what you want).
I created an Art Brush and it works well except as I think you pointed out earlier, the unfortunate gap. But this can be remedied by taking the original brush shape, rotating 90 degrees, and covering the gap with the brush.
UPDATE: I tried the rainbow circle on a new page and it worked fine. No overlap. I also converted the circle to editable shapes first. Maybe that helped.
You have many of options for including inclinations, from straightforward implicit slopes to ones you make yourself. You can add inclinations to fundamental shapes and content boxes, just as shapes that are a piece of diagrams, SmartArt, and WordArt. You can rapidly apply preset angles, or you can make your own slope load up with custom hues and indicated splendor, straightforwardness, inclination bearings, and situating.
petrichone - I'll have to take your word on this. I have no idea what you just posted. :O
What is your relation to Signs New York? Are you an employee or a fan?
Thanks for the tip, it could be useful in some cases, if the method proposed by @Jonopen does not work for one reason or another.
I didn't find the way to precisely place the stops on a gradient to get a regular result, especially to perfectly superimpose two stops of different colors. I'm trying to do it now by zooming in as much as I can and using a ruler, but it's quite painful. There may be a function I couldn't find, for example, a percentage.
Lorrain - Sometimes you need a different approach. In Xara there are always many ways to accomplish the same thing. This could be accomplished with overlapping circles. Or even with concentric rings with the Contour Tool
Well then you have solved your own problem? Or something like this?