However the EPS files we were given, which were created by Adobe Illustrator, were huge, bloated with all sorts of cruft (including thousands of lines of PostScript procedural code), and blew up my app, so I assumed my only option was to convert the SVG files into usable EPS. It turns out I didn't need to use Inkscape after all! My app needed the new logo in EPS format, and although I didn't mention it in my initial question we were in fact given the logo in EPS format as well as SVG. įinal resolution, as this might be of interest. (For various reasons I don't want to use an online convertor).
#Vector eps inkscape install#
So can I use Inkscape to generate a small, clean vector EPS file comparable to the one we have for the old logo? If so then I think my best option is to install Inkscape on my home machine and do the conversion there. The new logo isn't that different from the old one, and for the old logo we have an EPS file that is tiny, elegant, and almost infinitely magnifiable, because it is all outlines and fills, rather than pixels. (The image gets ugly pretty fast if you magnify it). My company has GIMP installed, but GIMP is raster oriented, and as far as I can tell when GIMP converts from SVG to EPS it always creates a rasterized output file, which in my case is usable but definitely not ideal. I need to convert a simple logo (just a couple of filled outlines) from SVG to EPS format before my app can use it. Can Inkscape convert an SVG file to an EPS file that stores its image as vectors rather than in raster form?