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Easy and flexible offsets in only one direction?

Enthusiast ,
May 09, 2017 May 09, 2017

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I want to create offsets like these in only one direction. What is a fast and effective method to create such offsets? I also want better and individual lineweight and stroke control on every offset that I make.. These are screenshots from SketchUp. It offers a very easy and flexible to do offset command.

I know the brush method but that's quite rigid. I want to do offset after I make a curve.

off1.png

off2.png

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Community Expert ,
May 09, 2017 May 09, 2017

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Select your path then go to Object > Path > Offset Path... and enter the amount of offset you want. The offset will enclose the path, so if it's not a closed shape, then you'll want to select the parts you want to remove and delete them.

If you want to make the effect live so that you can modify the path and have the offset update, then select your path and in the Appearance panel add a new stroke at whatever weight you want, then go to Effect > Path > Offset Path... and set the offset there. The offset applied this way will also enclose your path, so if you want to delete part of it, you'll have to go to Object > Expand Appearance to make it selectable. However expanding it will also make it no longer live, so if you change the original path afterward, the offset won't update.

It might work best to start your path from the center of where you want them, then keep the offsets on either side. Then select the portion you don't want and remove that, so in the end you have your set of open paths.

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Enthusiast ,
May 09, 2017 May 09, 2017

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https://forums.adobe.com/people/Myra+Ferguson  wrote

Select your path then go to Object > Path > Offset Path... and enter the amount of offset you want. The offset will enclose the path, so if it's not a closed shape, then you'll want to select the parts you want to remove and delete them.

If you want to make the effect live so that you can modify the path and have the offset update, then select your path and in the Appearance panel add a new stroke at whatever weight you want, then go to Effect > Path > Offset Path... and set the offset there. The offset applied this way will also enclose your path, so if you want to delete part of it, you'll have to go to Object > Expand Appearance to make it selectable. However expanding it will also make it no longer live, so if you change the original path afterward, the offset won't update.

It might work best to start your path from the center of where you want them, then keep the offsets on either side. Then select the portion you don't want and remove that, so in the end you have your set of open paths.

Well, of course I tried that. I should have written about it. Unlike sketchup, or AutoCAD, I cannot break a rectangle into 4 lines. Using scissor tool is quite tedious and doesn't give quick and accurate results of breaking a shape into its component lines.

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Community Expert ,
May 10, 2017 May 10, 2017

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To break up a path, you can select one or more anchor points and click on the button in the control panel that splits paths.

To offset your paths to one side, use the plugin CADtools.

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Guide ,
May 10, 2017 May 10, 2017

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I cannot break a rectangle into 4 lines. Using scissor tool is quite tedious and doesn't give quick and accurate results of breaking a shape into its component lines.

You need to

Using Direst Selection Tool ( white arrow)

select all , Shift click on one corner to deselect ,

Now the cut path scissors icon will show  up in the control panel .

Run it, and  then select the missed corner and run it to cut that path too

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Enthusiast ,
May 10, 2017 May 10, 2017

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https://forums.adobe.com/people/Ray+Yorkshire  wrote

I cannot break a rectangle into 4 lines. Using scissor tool is quite tedious and doesn't give quick and accurate results of breaking a shape into its component lines.

You need to

Using Direst Selection Tool ( white arrow)

select all , Shift click on one corner to deselect ,

Now the cut path scissors icon will show  up in the control panel .

Run it, and  then select the missed corner and run it to cut that path too

This breaks apart my curve into many individual parts .

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Community Expert ,
May 10, 2017 May 10, 2017

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Will you please show screenshots of your artwork and tell us exactly what is going wrong?

Thank you.

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Enthusiast ,
May 10, 2017 May 10, 2017

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https://forums.adobe.com/people/Monika+Gause  wrote

Will you please show screenshots of your artwork and tell us exactly what is going wrong?

Thank you.

Instead of just breaking at end points, my curve breaks in between also.

1.jpg

2.jpg

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Community Expert ,
May 10, 2017 May 10, 2017

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Then just select the corner points resp the points where you want to break it.

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Enthusiast ,
May 10, 2017 May 10, 2017

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https://forums.adobe.com/people/Monika+Gause  wrote

Then just select the corner points resp the points where you want to break it.

Okay. Isn't there a way so that closed loops don't appear and I get only ​open offsets as seen in the screenshots I posted in the very beginning?

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Community Expert ,
May 11, 2017 May 11, 2017

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The plugin CADtools as mentioned above.

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Enthusiast ,
May 11, 2017 May 11, 2017

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https://forums.adobe.com/people/Monika+Gause  wrote

The plugin CADtools as mentioned above.

I mean a method available within native illustrator without using any plugins.

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Guide ,
May 11, 2017 May 11, 2017

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Guess you cannot  and CadTools is expensive.

''Unlike sketchup, or AutoCAD, I cannot break a rectangle into 4 lines.''

How do you do that in Sketchup?

The lines always stayed glued together when I've used it , unless I pre make as  Groups Components.

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Enthusiast ,
May 11, 2017 May 11, 2017

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https://forums.adobe.com/people/Ray+Yorkshire  wrote

Guess you cannot  and CadTools is expensive.

''Unlike sketchup, or AutoCAD, I cannot break a rectangle into 4 lines.''

How do you do that in Sketchup?

The lines always stayed glued together when I've used it , unless I pre make as  Groups Components.

That's super easy. Just select any lines, and use the offset command, that's it. No closed loop formation.

Same goes for autocad.

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Community Expert ,
May 11, 2017 May 11, 2017

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arjun2  schrieb

https://forums.adobe.com/people/Monika+Gause   wrote

The plugin CADtools as mentioned above.

I mean a method available within native illustrator without using any plugins.

What do you think is the reason that the forum's veterans describe workarounds in this thread?

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Enthusiast ,
May 11, 2017 May 11, 2017

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https://forums.adobe.com/people/Monika+Gause  wrote

arjun2   schrieb

https://forums.adobe.com/people/Monika+Gause    wrote

The plugin CADtools as mentioned above.

I mean a method available within native illustrator without using any plugins.

What do you think is the reason that the forum's veterans describe workarounds in this thread?

The reason that the forum's veterans describe workarounds in this thread is because they are very kind, intelligent and helpful people. They want to help others to get better at any adobe software.

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Community Expert ,
May 11, 2017 May 11, 2017

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LATEST

  schrieb

https://forums.adobe.com/people/Monika+Gause   wrote

    schrieb

https://forums.adobe.com/people/Monika+Gause     wrote

The plugin CADtools as mentioned above.

I mean a method available within native illustrator without using any plugins.

What do you think is the reason that the forum's veterans describe workarounds in this thread?

The reason that the forum's veterans describe workarounds in this thread is because they are very kind, intelligent and helpful people. They want to help others to get better at any adobe software.

Mostly they describe workarounds because that's the only way to do it.

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Community Expert ,
May 10, 2017 May 10, 2017

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The thread started as a discussion of offset possibilities, but has devolved into a breaking-up-of-shapes debate. Presumably, the latter issue is really about how to delete the unwanted parts of a bi-directional offset. If that's the case, set aside the notion of "breaking up" anything, and just consider selecting for deletion. Simply use the Direct Select tool and marquee-select...

(I'll step through it here for demonstration purposes, tapping the Delete key in-between, but you can just hold down Shift to keep adding anchors and segments to the selection, then tap Delete once):

(This time holding Shift)

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