Live Path Effects

Live Path Effects (or LPEs) in Inkscape can be used to create new exciting objects from paths and groups, without destroying the original paths.

They can be selected and adjusted in the Path Effects dialog, which you can access as Path Effects from the bottom of the Path menu entry.

Each type of path effect has its own, unique set of options in this dialog, and most of them can also be manipulated by dragging the effect’s handles with the Node tool on canvas.

Path effects can also be stacked. So you could, for example, first roughen the outline of a path, then arrange copies of the path around a circle, and then align dozens of those circles of the roughened paths in a grid.

At any time you wish, you can still edit the shape of the underlying path object, and all the stacked effects will automatically adjust to the changes.

Adding a Live Path Effect to a Path

When you don’t have anything selected, the dialog will prompt you to choose a suitable object (a path, a shape, or a group of paths) before you can proceed. With the object selected, click on the arrow at the end of the search field in the dialog to see a list of available path effects, or, if you already know the name of the effect you want to use, start typing it into the search field. Click on the name of the effect you want to use.

In most cases, the path will already look different from before now.

In the dialog, you will be presented with a list of options for the selected effect. Adjust those to your liking, and also try out the newly added handles that appear when you use the Node Tool on an object with a Live Path Effect.

Examples

Here’s a description of some of the available LPEs. Don’t hesitate to discover the functionality of the others on your own:

Bend

This effect allows you to take any shape and bend it along a custom path. Useful for creating custom brushes or deforming objects on a path.

Corners (Fillet/Chamfer)

After you add this effect, you gain the ability to round any corner on your shape. You can round individual nodes by selecting them and dragging green handles on the canvas, or you can change values in the dialog.

Hatches

Fills your shape with hatches that can be heavily customized.

Interpolate Sub-Paths

The principle is the same as for the Interpolate extension, but the LPE approaches the topic differently. It will not create intermediate forms between two different objects, but only between parts of a single path. You need to combine two paths, so you have a path consisting of two sub-paths for this effect to work (Path ‣ Combine or Ctrl + K). Use the options to control the number of in-between steps and the trajectory along which blending will happen.

Knot

Creates gaps in sections of a path, when they cross with another part of the path.

Mirror Symmetry

This effect mirrors your drawing along an axis of your choice. You could try it when drawing symmetrical objects like faces, bottles, buildings, or butterflies.

Perspective / Envelope

Seriously helpful for drawing in perspective, thanks to the addition of 4 handles for the corners that can be moved around to make it look like a flat object is tilted in 3D space.

Stitch Sub-Paths

This effect is similar to Interpolate Sub-Paths, but it adds perpendicular lines between two paths.

Pattern Along Path

This LPE’s principle is similar to the extension with the same name. However, here the pattern parts will all be parts of the same path (and they will always be distorted to follow the path direction). It can be used like a brush, or just for adding a repeating edge to any object.

Offset

This effect changes the thickness of the whole object. You can change the offset (or inset, too!) with a specific value in a panel. Or you can drag on a round handle on the canvas just using your mouse.

Power Stroke

Adds handles that allow you to change the width of the path, so it can be different at different locations along the path.

Rotate Copies

This effect creates many copies of the path or object. It places those copies of the object around a circle. You could use it for making mandalas, flowers, and other radial drawings.

Roughen

This effect adds imperfections to your shapes to simulate a more organic drawing.

Sketch

Transforms your path into multiple lines that look like a sketch drawn with a pencil.

Tiling

This is a very powerful tool for quickly creating and arranging many copies of an object. It offers options to control the number of clones/tiles in rows and columns, gaps between them, offsets, size and rotation. There are also 16 different tiling rules available for you to choose from. This is useful for creating patterns, grids, and other repeating elements.

Conclusion

Now we have taken a small tour around many of the effects that add functionality to Inkscape and allow you to automate specific tasks.

This book is only an introduction to Inkscape. Do not hesitate to further explore the software once you feel at ease with its basic functionality.