Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I'm sure there's a simple solution for this, I've just searched everywhere and cannot find what it is. If I copy an object with a clipping mask in Illustrator, it selects only the masked area:
However, when I paste it into Photoshop, it pastes with all the extra space hidden by the mask showing.
What's the best way to prevent this? My current workaround has been to make a copy of the masked stuff, rasterize it, then copy and paste that into photoshop, but that's not really ideal so I'm hoping there's a simpler solution.
If you save the file (make sure the artboard has the same size as your artwork), you can choose File > Open as Smart Object in Photoshop.
Hi there,
Thank you for reaching out. In addition to the suggestion by @Ton Frederiks, you may try toggling the "Resize Image During Place" and "Always Create Smart Objects when placing" from preferences in Photoshop under General and see if that helps.
Regards,
Anshul Saini
You may try this Illustrator action if the clipping mask contains just plain filled paths, stroked paths or live type objects.
Instruction: Select a clipping mask and run the action.
The action won't work if the clipping mask contains more complex constructions with other object types (e.g. raster images).
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
If you save the file (make sure the artboard has the same size as your artwork), you can choose File > Open as Smart Object in Photoshop.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi there,
Thank you for reaching out. In addition to the suggestion by @Ton Frederiks, you may try toggling the "Resize Image During Place" and "Always Create Smart Objects when placing" from preferences in Photoshop under General and see if that helps.
Regards,
Anshul Saini
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
You may try this Illustrator action if the clipping mask contains just plain filled paths, stroked paths or live type objects.
Instruction: Select a clipping mask and run the action.
The action won't work if the clipping mask contains more complex constructions with other object types (e.g. raster images).
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
This slightly modified version allows multiple selected clipping groups. The first version does not allow it.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Although an Illustrator action route is not the most terrible approach, I think using (Cloud) Library objects to transfer the clipping groups may be the easiest way at the moment.
As far as I can see, Photoshop will always recognize only the visible parts of the clipping groups. No matter what kind of objects the clipping masks actually contain.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
This remains unanswered. Ton Frederiks' reply was not an answer to the OP's question yet it was upvoted as a "correct answer". The OP asked how to cut and paste using the mask bounds as the object. This is still a problem in 2024.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Someone may have marked it as correct answer, it is a workaround. I think that Kurt's suggestion is the easiest way to transfer clipped objects to Photoshop.
But you can always do a feature request: