Floral and Detailed Cutouts Fill In on Cricut: Fixing Complex Holes
If your floral or detailed cutouts keep filling in solid, the fastest fix is to run the file through StickerReady. It rebuilds the shapes as proper compound paths so every little gap stays open — no hunting through layers in Inkscape.
You can also fix it by hand, combining each outer shape with its inner cutouts into a compound path — the steps are below. But for an intricate floral design, doing that by hand is tedious; StickerReady is the shortcut.
Fix my cutouts ›Detailed holes need clean compound paths
Floral, mandala, and lace files multiply the same hole problem across many small cutouts.
Intricate designs — floral mandalas, lace patterns, paper-cut style art — have dozens or hundreds of small holes. When even some of them fill in, the whole piece is ruined. The cause is the same compound path issue as filled letters, just multiplied.
Why Detailed Designs Fill In
- Many ungrouped inner shapes. A floral cutout can have hundreds of petals and gaps. If they are separate shapes, every one of them cuts solid.
- Clipping masks faking the holes. Some designers use clipping masks to look like cutouts on screen. Cricut ignores clipping masks, so the holes vanish on import.
- Mixed path directions. Compound paths use path direction to decide what is a hole. Inconsistent directions across a complex design cause some holes to fill and others to cut.
The Fix for Complex Cutouts
- Open the SVG in Inkscape. Use Edit → Select All to see how many objects exist.
- If clipping masks are present, select the masked groups and use Object → Clip → Release, then rebuild the cutouts as real paths.
- Select the outer shape and all its inner cutouts, then Path → Combine (Ctrl+K) to make one compound path.
- If some holes still fill, select the compound path, open the Node tool, and use Path → Break Apart then Combine again to reset path directions.
- Save As Plain SVG and test in Design Space.
Even with perfect compound paths, cutouts smaller than about 5 mm will not cut cleanly. For very intricate art, simplify before cutting — see our weeding and cut quality guide.
Fix intricate cutouts in one step
StickerReady rebuilds compound paths across complex designs — no node-by-node editing.
Try StickerReady freeFrequently Asked Questions
Why do some holes cut and others fill in on the same design?
Inconsistent path direction. Compound paths rely on inner shapes running opposite to outer shapes. When directions are mixed, some holes register and others do not. Breaking apart and recombining the paths resets the directions.
My intricate SVG freezes Design Space. Is that related?
It can be. Very complex files with thousands of nodes both freeze Design Space and tend to have path problems. Simplifying the design reduces both issues — see our SVG checker guide.