![]() Give it the same color as the stroke color of the previous circle, but set the stroke to none. Then, make it blur using the blur effect in Fill and Stroke Panel (Shift Ctrl F).Ĭreate a new ellipse and put it above the previous blurry circle. Set the stroke width as wide as you like. Give it no fill and a stroke with a color you like. Open up your Inkscape and draw a circle of any size. Now we need to fine tune it for our needs.Well, I have just got inspired to create a bubble illustration on Inkscape after seeing many bubble-style wallpapers. So, select your square and click on Filters->Bevels->Bloom. It may not be perfect, but it will give us a good start on it. Now that we have a green square, we need to give it a nice bevel.I've decided to make the main part of my box dark green by clicking on it in the palette row. Now we want to set the fill of the square to the proper color.On the palette the white box with the "X" is an "Unset" color By default, selecting a color sets the Fill, but holding Shift when selecting a color, either from the palette or the eye-dropper tool (we'll cover that later), sets the Stroke instead. What we just did is "Unset" the Stroke. ![]() So, hold Shift and click on the left-most box of the palette (the white box with an "X" through it on the row of colors at the bottom). Strokes are good in Keen graphics for adding borders around things, but in our case, we do not want one.
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