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I'm trying to do inside offset on an ellipse but when I do it I get pointed ends on the ellipse. Only way I could do it was to scale down my ellipse to size of inner I wanted then do outside offset. Is there a way to do it by doing an inside offset? Duplicating and scaling of course doesn't do it. What's the correct way to accomplish this? Thanks
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The pointed ends inside the oval is just a consequence of geometry. The offset path effect creates a new path at a consistent distance parallel to the existing path. Pointed ends will always eventually occur when the offset setting inside an oval path is made large enough. Creating a smaller oval rather than just using the offset path effect is one work-around, but the distance between the two paths is not uniform. Another work-around is manually editing the pointed ends or using a corner filet effect tool. A number of Illustrator plug-ins out there will do it.
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If you duplicate the ellipse, then go to your transform panel, in the width or height box, place your cursor at the end of the measurment values, then type a minus sign and .25 (or whatever your offset value needs to be), and hit enter.
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Thats cool but it isn't symetric I want it to look like this on right
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It will be if you uncheck the constrain height/width icon in the transform panel. Enter the value one at a time on the width and height dimensions.
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yeah its pretty close but I guess it's just another technique to do it. Still looks a little different from the one that is offset on the right from the inner ellipse
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You can do the offset path, and then use the corner widgets to round off the points
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thanks, I forgot about those.