Ok I just tried clicking the edge of the shape and offset path it does not work can I send you the file to look please?You should be able see each element in the group and choose the element you want to offset it's path or is it raster data?
After you click on it, when you have the shape selected, copy it. Make sure it's the whole shape and not just a line segment from the direct selection tool.Ok I just tried clicking the edge of the shape and offset path it does not work can I send you the file to look please?
It's not that amazing.If the client can't supply the correct file I would just use vectormagic, it does an amazing job of making vector art from almost anything (including many colors) as long as the quality is somewhat decent to start with. Super quick, shows you end result, allows you to modify in real time, etc., and only $10 a month, cancel anytime.
That's your opinion, do you have any useful alternatives vs negativity?It's not that amazing.
I know someone who uses that. It's not that good. It approximates things, If there is shading it does a clunky banding job and it cant cope well with detail. I consider the results usually mediocre and something you may be able to get away with at best. As far as starting with decent quality. If its decent I can turn it into a 1200 dpi CMYK Bitmap and just clean the edges by hand, smooth the colors and There you go... it's back. I was talking about bitmapped garbage that was a web thumbnail and they think its great because it looks ok on their smart phone. This is one corner of the 2" 72 DPI logo. They want to put it on a Van, so it needs to be @ 24 times bigger. The background is a splotchy paint thing and the loops go all the way around and around and are twisted and have endless color gradations. The only way is a complete recreation and there are no geometic or drawable shapes to begin with. And all the edges are 72 dpi fuzzy. Shame on him for having a logo made and not getting a decent file of it.just use vectormagic, it does an amazing job of making vector art from almost anything (including many colors) as long as the quality is somewhat decent to start with.
Just to clarify, the original request was how to turn a PSD file (assuming good quality) into vector art for cut lines, not how to make a raster file better quality.I know someone who uses that. It's not that good. It approximates things, If there is shading it does a clunky banding job and it cant cope well with detail. I consider the results usually mediocre and something you may be able to get away with at best. As far as starting with decent quality. If its decent I can turn it into a 1200 dpi CMYK Bitmap and just clean the edges by hand, smooth the colors and There you go... it's back. I was talking about bitmapped garbage that was a web thumbnail and they think its great because it looks ok on their smart phone. This is one corner of the 2" 72 DPI logo. They want to put it on a Van, so it needs to be @ 24 times bigger. The background is a splotchy paint thing and the loops go all the way around and around and are twisted and have endless color gradations. The only way is a complete recreation and there are no geometic or drawable shapes to begin with. And all the edges are 72 dpi fuzzy. Shame on him for having a logo made and not getting a decent file of it.
We've got Vector magic, Graphic tracer pro, and just recently a subscription to Vectorai. Vector AI (which I learned about here on this forum) is actually quite good, and super fast. Before I was turned on to that, I found using image trace in Adobe Illustrator was better than Vector magic or Graphic tracer pro.That's your opinion, do you have any useful alternatives vs negativity?
There's no need to be rude, this is supposed to be a forum to help each other, not everyone has enough spare time to read all threads where this has come up before.We've got Vector magic, Graphic tracer pro, and just recently a subscription to Vectorai. Vector AI (which I learned about here on this forum) is actually quite good, and super fast. Before I was turned on to that, I found using image trace in Adobe Illustrator was better than Vector magic or Graphic tracer pro.
.... this topic has come up many many times on this forum. I'm not the only person here who is unimpressed with vector magic, but if you like the mediocrity, and spending a lot of time fiddling with the settings to dial it in almost right, then by all means, do what you want.