I was getting "low poly" curves using the general approach of increasing the density. So I decided to dig a little deeper and solve that problem as it seemed to be a side effect of this approach and I think it has to do with the original density or dpi.
We have seen 72 in this answer and 96 in this answer being suggested as the default density of an image, but which one? what if mine is different?
ImageMagick has a way to sort that out:
identify -verbose test.svg
this will put out a lot of metadata about the image file, including:
Image:
Filename: test.svg
Format: SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics)
Mime type: image/svg+xml
Class: ...
Geometry: ...
Resolution: 37.79x37.79
Print size: ...
Units: PixelsPerCentimeter
# and a whole lot MORE ...
for a more concise query you can try:
identify -format "%x x %y %U" test.svg
=> 37.789999999999999147 x 37.789999999999999147 PixelsPerCentimeter
as suggested by this forum post and modified with this documentation
Now we know the current density of the image but may need to convert it to the correct units for conversion or mogrifying (PixelsPerInch or dpi)
this is a simple calculations of PixelsPerCentimeter x 2.54
37.789999999999999147 x 2.54 = 95.9866 ~> 96
if you prefer a chart or online calculator for this you can try https://www.pixelto.net/cm-to-px-converter.
now that we have the right original density converted to dpi, the rest of the logic stated in the above answers falls into place and the svg file can be scaled to a better "resolution" by multiplying the original density.
the original density was far too pixelated as a png for me, so in my case 5x the original density or -density 480
was good enough for me. Remember that this resizes the image as well and you will need to adjust for that when using / implementing the image as compared to the original svg.
NOTE: I did try the Inkscape approaches as well and also had the pixelation problem, but had already seen an improvement with the density approach so I decided to dig into that deeper. The output of the Inkscape attempt however gave me the idea, which you can also use for determining the dpi, but that is a lot to install just to get something you can already get with ImageMagick
Area 0:0:20.75:17 exported to 21 x 17 pixels (96 dpi)
-size 1024x1024
is working fine, what is your imagemagick version?-resize
just stretches the converted image, with poor quality results.convert -size 1024x1024 test.svg test.png
works fine with ImageMagick 7.0.7-0 Q16 (current version in Chocolatey repo for Windows). Just make sure that-size
appears before the input filename, else a 16x16 picture will be upscaled to give a blurry result.