caronte
Guest
Hello everyone,some of you might recommend a softwere to convert rasrer images into vectors? then transmit the tool path in the car!?
Thank you.
Thank you.
Are you sure? ? ?Hello everyone,some of you might recommend a softwere to convert rasrer images into vectors? then transmit the tool path in the car!?
Thank you.
if ho capito bene proves that:You're right. the work I would like to do is artistic and purely personal, so I don't need the penny!
the strategy I would like to use would be as follows:
import image jpg
3d level processing
final vectorization nurbs
execution c.n.c
I wonder... What programs to use?? for the execution are affixed with mastercam working egregiamente with cloud surfaces, but others? not all work in nurbs.
another chance at zero cost: http://www.wintopo.com/it is not recommended however to vectorize jpeg images: better first transform them (as much as possible) at the stroke, saving them then in gif to 256 colors.Could someone of you recommend me a softwere to convert rasrer images into vectors?
I agree with what you say, I have been scanning images and logos for several years then working them and vectoring them with inkscape, exporting the .dxf and the amount in qcad, which is great to follow the curves and transform them into strings and lines (where I then import it into pro/and I have to simplify at most otherwise it would be impossible to create the sketch) but if I did not understand bad carronte wanted to vectorize immediately )by personal experience (digital paper maps of the last century), the result of an automatic vectorization is as much better as "simple" is the starting bitmap.
Therefore it is better to lose a couple of hours in the photo editing premium to use a wintopo, rather than go crazy a couple of days after adjusting the failures that would result from a "to which" vectorization.
by summing up, it is necessary:
- decrease the number of colors to the minimum essential, the ideal would come to a monochromatic image
- eliminate the background "noise" of the individual orphan pixels scattered in the bitmap (photoshop does it without problems)
- save in gif or tif format, however both Lostly.
once the raster is vectorized, before feeding it to a delicate numerical control machine, I would try in a cad to "raddrizzare" the resulting dxf threshing (I use map2006 which possesses appropriate tools).
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