• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Inkscape Question

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Lodovico

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
925
Reaction score
22
Location
PA
Hello,

I've started messing with Inkscape and I'm having trouble determining the right size to export an image to be a proper sized beer label.

I realize that the starting box on a new document is an 8.5 X 11 sheet but does anyone have a simple vector graphic drawn that is the proper size for a beer label when using Inkscape??

If you do, could you post it hear, so folks could import it into inkscape and work with it. I realize it's vector and you can shrink down anything you design, but I'd still like a point of reference.

At the same time, does anyone have a neck label template already drawn that they could post for users here that want to create a neck label but are useless with the drawing function of inkscape??

If anyone could post these, I think a lot of us incompetent folks would be very grateful. :D
 
Just make your document size the size you want your label to be.

I wish I could help you more. I use Illustrator, and I haven't bothered to make neck labels.
 
I guess I'm more looking for someone that has already drawn out the neck label shape that I could use for all of my brews. Thanks!
 
Can anyone help here? I'm sure someone that is good with inkscape could whip up this shape in two minutes. Anyone willing to do this?
 
All I did for my neck label shape was take one off my local micro brew bottles, scan it, and delete everything in it to put whatever I wanted in it. But that was in photoshop, not a vector program.
 
If you can do the steps that snail did, it's super easy to convert to a vector drawing. Just open the scanned image in inkscape, hit shift-alt-b and play with the settings in the new window until it finds the edge of the label.

Actually, it'll probably be easier if you scan the back of a label rather than the front, so you won't end up with a ton of extra vector points (due to the words / images / whatever on the front).
 
Actually, if somebody already has a scanned neck label already, I'd be happy to vectorize it.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top