I'm adding the svg in my website. The starbucks logo makes that effect when I zoom it out, it is an embedded png. Is there a way to prevent making that dotted lines?
It's probably because when you zoom on a raster image, it pixelates. Although that image is so small, zooming out only makes it smaller. I don't know how you can even see the lines when zoomed out.
However in this particular image, the white outlines are so thin, I think you can't avoid it. Even if you re-drew it as a vector, the white outlines would be so thin, they probably never would display very well.
My guess it may be affected by the browser you are using too how the image appears, however the core of the problem is that the transparent pixels have a white colour with 0 alpha value.
You'll need to use a raster editor to edit the image before embedding it to the svg.
In gimp you can create a layer mask from the image's alpha channel and paint green all the unnecessary white pixels.
Besides that there is not much you can do correcting that logo in inkscape. Can trace bitmap and use a vector double for it but some quality will be lost then.
I'm adding the svg in my website. The starbucks logo makes that effect when I zoom it out, it is an embedded png. Is there a way to prevent making that dotted lines?
It's probably because when you zoom on a raster image, it pixelates. Although that image is so small, zooming out only makes it smaller. I don't know how you can even see the lines when zoomed out.
However in this particular image, the white outlines are so thin, I think you can't avoid it. Even if you re-drew it as a vector, the white outlines would be so thin, they probably never would display very well.
Hi.
My guess it may be affected by the browser you are using too how the image appears, however the core of the problem is that the transparent pixels have a white colour with 0 alpha value.
You'll need to use a raster editor to edit the image before embedding it to the svg.
In gimp you can create a layer mask from the image's alpha channel and paint green all the unnecessary white pixels.
Besides that there is not much you can do correcting that logo in inkscape. Can trace bitmap and use a vector double for it but some quality will be lost then.