
You can leave your feedback about what works / doesn't work at Please test the extension, and always carefully check the result before you send it to a print service. When you add a bleed, an area of the given width outside the page area in Inkscape will be included in the PDF file. The page size corresponds to the document size in Scribus. Not use any other SVG features that are not supported by Scribus Not use any transparency if you're exporting to PDF/X-1, PDF/X-3 or PDF 1.3

Not use filters in your drawing (this includes blur) Have selected one color profile to use for the colors in your fileĪssign all colors in the document with the color managed color selector in the Fill and Stroke dialog Have enabled color management for your document Have Scribus 1.5.x installed (the Scribus executable must not be called scribus-ng) To be able to get a correct and color-managed CMYK PDF file with text converted to curves that corresponds to your drawing in Inkscape, you must: It is available as one of the many export formats in the 'Save as' and 'Save a Copy' dialogs. It also comes with a few new features that hadn't been stable enough to make it into Inkscape 1.0.Īn experimental Scribus PDF export extension has been added. PS: CorelDraw can export to all of these file formats.Inkscape 1.0.1 is mainly a stability and bugfix release. I thought I might be able to export it to Inkscape and exporting as an *.eps file there, but the conversion doesn't work either. Sadly eps2pgf does not show compability with the *.eps file created by CorelDraw ( error report). My attempt to solve it: I have tried exporting the file in CorelDraw to *.eps and using eps2pgf converting it to *.pgf. My question: Do you have an idea how to create *pgf files? Or is there another way of editing the font in my figures? I also want these figures as *.pgf so Latex automatically knows what is text and converts it to the same font as the rest of the document. I have now created figures in CorelDraw such as this one. It works great with the figures that I created with matplotlib.pyplot. With *.pgf files the font is automatically adjusted, which is exactly what I want. for that purpose, I have found the neat *.pgf format that Latex can handle with \usepackage I have a lot of figures, so I would like the process to be automatic. I am in the midst of writing my thesis and I want my figures to have the same font as my text in Latex.
