Why do you need a clipping path?
just bring in your picture with the backgroud removed.
Illustrator supports photoshops transparency.
So does Freehand MX if anyone needs to know.
For FreeHand to support it, you MUST save with Maximize Compatibility.
If I copy an image in Photoshop then paste it into illustrator, it brings in a white background. Do I have to adjust any settings?
Place you image, don’t copy and paste it and see what happens.
Great! That worked. But any ideas as to why the paths are not accurate if you choose to use paths?
Oh! You mean you’re wanting to bring JUST the path drawn in PS into AI? Not the image that’s clipped by it?
I have an image of a sleeping bag but I need only the sleeping bag, not the rest of the background. I need to bring the sleeping bag into AI and and InDesign. I figured out how to avoid using the clipping path for AI but not for InDesign. When I try to bring it into InDesign from the clipping path, it is not accurate meaning there still are some small white spaces around the image. any way i can fix this?
thanks!
You don’t need a clipping path with InDesign either.
Forget how you had to do it in Quark.
You are now in the 21st century using uptodate software.
Well, support for transparency doesn’t necessarily negate the need for paths – they’re still the best way to make selections for many things.
sebpeters –
Is the path "accurate" in Photoshop? After you turn the path into a selection, jump the item to a new layer and fill the layer under it with a color that’s close to what you’re using in InDesign. My guess is your path isn’t as accurate as you think it is.
-phil
support for transparency doesn’t necessarily negate the need for paths
it does if the path is being used to clip out the background
Buko –
You forgot to quote the rest …
"they’re still the best way to make selections for many things."
In other words, you’re not using the path to make a clipping path – just a selection.
-phil
True, but I understand the question to be using the Path to to make a clipping to remove the background. So a clipping path is not nessasary for this when placing the image in ID or AI. Unlike Quark or Pagemaker.
Thats the point I was trying to get accross.
I use paths just not for clipping images.
PShock has a point. Also, a path does not exclude color, white or whatever your background in the photo is, to one side of the path but is a ‘median’ line which means that some pixels that are at the edge may be included if they slip under the path and are detected as white or a gradation of the color between the product edge and white. I cut my paths well enough into the product to make sure that there is no chance of the background color ‘seeping’ in. Also, after you make your path, as I mentioned here, DO NOT then make a selection using the path and then delete the bacground to white! This, because the path is only a median line, makes white come back to haunt you by letting some of the edge pixels inside of the path gradate to white.
Work in 1600x magnification or higher to see how this works.
….however if you actually prefer the hard-edged vector-based silouette one gets from using a clipping path, as opposed to the more natural, anti-aliased fade to transparency…
Clipping paths are the only way to reproduce the look of the the old rubylith masks, and we all know how important that is <g>
Placing this argument aside, there should not be a problem embedding a clipped image, vis-a-vis the integrity of the path.
I think, as PShock suggested, sebpeters needs to take a closer look at the path in Photoshop.
Some subscribe to exporting the path to Illy, then placing the unmasked image, positioning the path, and turning it into a clipping mask, but this should really not be neccesary should it?
"Clipping paths are the only way to reproduce the look of the the old rubylith masks, and we all know how important that is <g>"
Them’s Fightin’ Werds!
: )
"Clipping Path Is Not Accurate"
My first thought when I read the topic title is that you did not use the pen tool to create the path but used a magnetic pen or some other creepy invention to make paths EZ.
Now hol’ on there pardner.
Twas a time when I could fashion a mighty pretty ruby silo.
Taint agin the notion, jes figgering that we’s in new-fangled times about now.
flashin’ zacto blades. ’tis an art to b-hold.
P-Shop’s paths tools R so cool ’cause ye kin go back en kerrect a cut not havin’ to re-do th’ ruby.
yep.
flashin’ zacto blades.
Not me I used a real ruby swivel knife
Buko, I’ve got one of those, with the microscopic ball bearings. Cool!
We might need ’em again if the power goes out or the printing industry decides that computers are just not going to make it in this business.