![]() ![]() It smoothened some of the more jagged edges as well. You can go on both and then click on, highlight vectors to see the vector lines on top of the original raster here on the both tab. ![]() So, if you wanna see how the converted vector lines stack up to the original raster image, you can actually cycle through these tabs. For this particular image, I think we’d want to go with the outline method. The next step after we’re done editing this and cleaning it up is to click on, convert raster image, right next to the clean image button. If you’re happy with what you see on the preview window here, click on okay. For good measure, since the edges are a bit jagged, let’s click on smooth. So, you can actually click on, remove speckles and holes here to get rid of that as well. We still have a little bit of editing to do with this hole. We don’t want any of these holes, so increasing the threshold levels gets rid of them. You can edit the threshold level just to see if it produces a cleaner output. Clicking on the threshold option here turns the image black and white. The first thing we wanna do when we open up the file is click on clean image to clean up the image just a little bit. Let’s open up an image of a spanner here. ![]() ![]() So, say you have a raster file, whether it be an image file or a raster PDF that you want to import into Fusion 360, but you don’t want to have to go through the hassle of manually tracing over the raster file to effectively vectorize it. ![]()
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