![]() ![]() Select all objects that will have a shadow, group them (or not, as you like, - you could also move the shadows to a different layer to make selection of all non-shadow objects easier). I've been thinking that it might be easier to not use the dropshadow filter with all its transformation implications at all, but to create the shadows manually: Is the grouping process the simplest way to achieve this, and is there a better workflow for achieving it that the one I I think the way they do it here is to change the title to something that starts with SOLVED, not sure, though.ītw. The grouping process is also a tricky workaround to explain, and difficrult to achieve as well - I can't find a way to do it with the mouse alone - if I hit f2, select an object in the group, then f1, click on it to bring up 'scale' arrows, I can't click on it again to see the rotate arrows, as that selects the whole group. The SVG I wanted to use has about 300 different shapes in it, so it could be complicated making lots of groups and maintaining the correct order of operations. ![]() The problem for me is that I wanted to share my files with a large community and allow everyone to remix them by moving and rotating the different objects, I was hoping that all they would have to worry about would be moving objects, and the drop shadow would still work. The second option is what I did to create this test project, but unfortunately it isn't feasible on complex objects with many nodes or curves. ![]()
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