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melspring
Participant
September 1, 2018
Answered

How to Create a Stroke / Bubble Effect around Text with a Text Box or Shape

  • September 1, 2018
  • 1 reply
  • 22149 views

I am looking to create a text effect like this where the text box bubbles or strokes around the shape of the text.  I am not sure if this particular effect was created in illustrator or another program, but I am interested in learning how to do this. I have looked through several tutorials and have not quite found what I am looking for.  Thank you in advance for any assistance.

Correct answer Jacob Bugge

Mel,

What Michele said, with the following possible other way.

When you outline the live Type, you get a Group of Compound Paths (each of which may be a true Compound Path (with one or more counters (= holes)) or basically just a simple path), one for each letter.

With that Group selected, you may then Object>Path>Offset Path which will give you another set of Compound Paths one for each offset letter shapes within the same Group, the offset paths being selected, you may Ctrl/Cmd+G to turn them into a Group within the Group, and in any case you may Pathfinder>Unite which should (more or less) give the contiguous outer offset path along with possible inner ones.

1 reply

Jacob Bugge
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 1, 2018

Mel,

Much of it can be made by simply selecting the text and Object>path>Offset Path by the desired distance to the strokes round the text, then deleting the unwanted parts.

melspring
melspringAuthor
Participant
September 1, 2018

I am trying this suggestion but I suppose I am doing something incorrectly because I am not getting any result at all.

michelew83603738
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 1, 2018

michelew83603738  schrieb

Are you converting your text to outlines first? That is the first step.

No, it's not.

You can use the appearance panel and Assign a new stroke to the text.

Then assign the effect > Path > Offset path to that stroke


While what @MonikaGause said is correct that you can use the appearance panel to simply get an offset path, this is not the result you are looking for. In my opinion, in order to do what you are trying to achieve, it would ultimately take more work. By first creating outlines, creating a compound path and then an offset, some of the work is done for you. It seems like a much better workflow for what you want.