Need help in trying to finalize file(s) to print our first snowmobile hood and tunnel graphics. I am at the point of needing to get this done and willing to pay set it up for nested printing within Illustrator or allow Flexi to do the nesting. The purchased template layout is too wide for the material we print on, (which seems to be typical) and need to rearrange the individual template objects, without any changes to the positions of the text/logos and the image used as back ground. Once the Illustrator files are finalized and saved, the files will be reopened in Flexi to print on our HP 335 Latex printer.
I have been searching for help on the topics of clipping masks, groups, compound paths, etc., I have yet to find help on how to rearrange the finished objects for printing on the material we have in house or set it up so Flexi can use it's nesting function to achieve the desired result.
The best example of what I am trying to say / achieve can be found at the following link:
It talks about two different backgrounds, vector or image. Based on what I read, I believe it is best to save the original vector art as an image because there are literally 100's of vector paths that make up the design.
The following are the process steps I am trying to use and I keep failing to complete the first pass.
Bryce
I have been searching for help on the topics of clipping masks, groups, compound paths, etc., I have yet to find help on how to rearrange the finished objects for printing on the material we have in house or set it up so Flexi can use it's nesting function to achieve the desired result.
The best example of what I am trying to say / achieve can be found at the following link:
How to apply a clipping mask to multiple independent paths?
I'm trying to create a clipping mask on a bunch of paths, but I need some way to be able to move the paths around afterwards: For example, the shape is each of the 48 continental states of the US ...
graphicdesign.stackexchange.com
It talks about two different backgrounds, vector or image. Based on what I read, I believe it is best to save the original vector art as an image because there are literally 100's of vector paths that make up the design.
The following are the process steps I am trying to use and I keep failing to complete the first pass.
If the background is an image
- Make the first mask > Copy > Paste in place
- Select the next vector > Cut
- Click twice the Mask to isolate the Clip Group
- Click twice the Clip Group to isolate the Clipping Path
- Paste in place
- Delete the old Clipping Path vector, with this process you are replacing it
- Click twice on an empty area of the document to exit the clipping mask edition
- Repeat with the next vectors
Bryce