IndiaFOSS 2025
The Inkscape project sent four contributors (Anunay, Ishaan, Manpreet, and Vaibhav) to attend IndiaFOSS 2025 which took place on September 20 and 21, 2025, in Bengaluru. The event provided a platform for Indian FOSS contributors to discuss their projects, future collaborations, and more. Students and other FOSS enthusiasts were also in attendance, making it a diverse and engaging gathering. The Inkscape project hosted a booth where people could talk to the contributors, and try Inkscape live! Stickers (some of which are shown below) were also available for the visitors. Our stickers were frequently praised for their designs and uniqueness.
Before the main conference, all 4 contributors attended the Maintainers Summit organized by the FOSSUnited folks on 19th September. The summit was an unconference style event, a small gathering of maintainers/contributors of various FOSS projects. Among other things we discussed the possibility of funding Inkscape through FLOSS/Fund. The originators of the fund talked about the challenges of funding critical FOSS projects from India. One of the current challenges is the significant red tape involved, but they're actively working with the regulatory authorities to reduce that.
After attending a few sessions, we co-opted the venue to have our own mini-summit, and managed to work on a few things. Ishaan investigated enabling LTO builds for Inkscape which could result in more optimized binaries. Ishaan and Vaibhav together looked at a font reloading issue on Linux when fonts are deleted while being used in a document. Manpreet created a bugfix to get the correct font properties from the font definitions in the target AI file, because a version of the font was not parsed correctly. Anunay started work on calculating sRGB fallbacks in inkex (Inkscape's extension library), needed for accurate colors in inkai, Inkscape's AI file importer extension. Anunay and Manpreet also discussed approaches to refactor some global states in inkai. 
Booth experience
Most visitors who came at the booth were unaware about Inkscape and vector graphics in general. The conversations usually started with explaining the difference between vector and raster graphics, then giving examples of other vector graphics programs. We then continued by informing them that Inkscape could be used to design logos, posters, and shapes that could then be sewn, CNC-machined, laser-cut, and more... Some people even got excited about the prospect that they could draw something and scale it indefinitely without any loss of quality. We would then usually ask if they wanted to try out Inkscape, and gave a short tutorial of all the tools.
Some people were interested in knowing if Inkscape supported collaborative designing and editing like some paid online offerings. They also asked if Inkscape could be run on browsers, Android tablets, or iPads. Although there is no direct support for browsers and iPads, we were happy to report that Inkscape now has an Android CI that produces experimental Android builds.
Several visitors told us that they were using a different vector graphics program, and said that they'd try out Inkscape. We got to know about a place in Kerala where one can go and get their designs laser cut. They currently use a very old designing tool, and were excited to learn about Inkscape.
We were introduced to Mind Empowered, which is a Kerala based non-profit teaching Inkscape to deaf children. The founder of the non-profit also asked for availability of someone who could teach Inkscape in the city of Kochi, and we were able to connect them with someone from that region. Another teacher associated with the organization asked about the current accessibility features for specially-abled users. They also asked if we had any plans to work on this in the near future.
One very enthusiastic Inkscape user complained about the lack of a good reference for all the keyboard shortcuts. They were using Inkscape with an LLM to generate SVG code for desktop mats with designs of Linux commands’ cheatsheets. None of us were aware that Inkscape actually had a shortcut guide under Help menu > Learn more > Keys and Mouse Reference, we learned about this after the event.
The KDE project’s booth was just beside ours, and we noticed that they were drawing Konqi (the mascot of KDE). So, we had a friendly competition with them on who could draw Konqi better.
A hardware enthusiast who designed some PCBs in Inkscape, and then imported those in KiCAD also visited the booth. They showed us their workflow as well. One of the PCBs they designed is shown above.
Some visitors asked about the steps to start contributing to Inkscape. We showed them our repositories, and pointed them to Inkscape's chat system at https://chat.inkscape.org if they needed specific help.
We also met a developer working on a proprietary vector graphics program, and we discussed about various extensions the project was working on for importing files made in that and other proprietary programs. Before leaving, they wrote "Good Product" on the user artwork SVG of Day 2.
There were a few people who wanted to contact contributors from the Inkscape team for FOSS events. We were happy to share our contact details with them.
Many visitors reported that Inkscape was a part of their school curriculum. Since the version of Inkscape that was usually taught was quite old, we showed them some of the newer features like multiple pages, Shape Builder tool, etc.
We had a great talk with contributors from the Wikimedians of Kerala User Group, who also had a booth at the conference. They were very enthusiastic about the LPEs offered by Inkscape.

At the end of day one, we went for dinner with a bunch of folks from various Indian FOSS communities like OpenStreetMap India, Debian India, ILUG-D (India Linux Users’ Group Delhi), ILUG-B, (India Linux Users’ Group Bengaluru), etc. A group picture taken just before the dinner is shown on the right.
At the end of the second day, we all were both excited and exhausted, so we wrapped up the event by having a nice group dinner (shown on the left).
User Artworks!
At the start of each day, we had an empty document open inside Inkscape for visitors to draw on, and for many people it was their first time drawing vector shapes, especially using a graphics tablet. Inkscape has an Automatic Save feature which can periodically save an open file. This is supposed to be useful in cases of a crash and/or file corruption. However, we repurposed this feature, and set the autosave interval to 1 minute (which can be adjusted in Preferences > Input/Output > Autosave). As a result, we now had individual SVGs for each minute. Using the Inkscape CLI, the awesome ImageMagick and GNU Parallel programs, and our incremental SVGs, here is a timelapse of what visitors drew over the two days.
The Calligraphy and the Pencil tool turned out to be the favorite tools!
The final SVG sources for the drawings: Day 1 Artwork (1 of 2), Day 1 Artwork (2 of 2), Day 2 Artwork
Reflections
Meeting with the wider Indian FOSS community filled us with enthusiasm and pride. We realised that we are part of such a rich and diverse ecosystem of tools and users. We also felt very lucky to have had the chance to represent the Inkscape project and meet with its current, and hopefully, future users. We hope to return next year with even more enthusiasm. See you!









The beautiful embroidery Kaalleen gifted to the other participants (from
The 7 participants of the Frankfurt Summit.

These important events give the contributors of Inkscape a place where they can get some work done. Rafael [pictured left] is seen here working on some graphic user interface code at the event space. Mike, Adam, and Rafael spent a lot of time discussing and implementing UX designs. Marc did lots of merges, especially forward porting. We had great discussions on the future of Inkscape, including a plan for an improved Live Path Effects system (more of a Live Object system), better testing, etc..
During breaks and after the day, the contributors will go out for a meal and socialise. Rafael, Adam, Mikekov, Tav and Marc [pictured right] sit at a restaurant near the event space for lunch and get to know each other better.
After the Inkscape Summit event, everyone was able to participate in the
Meeting with the wider community of Free Software contributors helps us stay up to date with what's happening in the wider industry as well as meeting with some pretty cool people who help run a lot of the software which our users also depend upon. Big thanks for the organisers of LGM for running the event this year, which is the first in person event since Covid.