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Participant
July 13, 2022
Answered

Merging different color objects

  • July 13, 2022
  • 4 replies
  • 5478 views

Hopefully this makes sense. I'm lost. Ten years ago I was working as a graphic designer and preparing files for screen print. I would merge 2+ color objects into one object. I think I used UNITE pathfinder but maybe not? 

Anyway, when these objects merged, the overlapping parts of the design that were different colors would unite, so that some parts would be cut off in order to line up with the other color. So hard to explain!!  So then I'd be able to put each separate color on its own layer. Any screen printers here that understand what I'm saying?? 

So I try to use unite and it just turns into one color instead of keeping the existing colors. I just need these different colored objects to merge together while keeping their colors. 

any ideas? Please help? 

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Monika Gause

Maybe you used the Pathfinder Merge?

4 replies

Jacob Bugge
Community Expert
Community Expert
July 14, 2022

Ah, Megan, so you just wish to work strictly in the stacking order from the topmost object down, cutting off the unseen overlapped parts of paths, corresponding to what you see from the start in normal Preview.

 

I assumed you wished the ability to choose freely which path each overlapping part should belong to, regardless of stacking order, hence the two step way.

 

The images below show the outcomes in a case with blue in front of magenta in front of red, where the Merge way and the Divide+Unite way applied from top to bottom look just like the normal Preview, and where the Divide+Unite way applied more freely can end up looking quite differently.

 

Click Here to see in Chrome 

 

 

Monika Gause
Community Expert
Monika GauseCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
July 14, 2022

Maybe you used the Pathfinder Merge?

Participant
July 14, 2022

Wow I'm dumb. I went through the pathfinder options and totally skipped over this one. That would be it. Thank you! Now I'm going to bury my head in the sand. 

michelew83603738
Community Expert
Community Expert
July 14, 2022

If I am understanding, where the two objects intersect, there would be a blended color of the two. You didn't actually divide the object into three objects, it was just an overlap. I am thinking that you used a blending mode of some sort. Is this what you are remembering? 

 

Jacob Bugge
Community Expert
Community Expert
July 14, 2022

Megan,

 

I believe that you used two different Pathfinders, first Divide, then Unite.

 

Divide creates a Group of paths with each overlap becoming one path between the non overlapping paths. Then you can Unite each overlap path with either/one of the adjacent non overlapping paths. You can keep the resulting paths as a Group.

 

Now you can also do it with the Shape Builder (or Live Paint Group),

https://helpx.adobe.com/illustrator/using/creating-shapes-shape-builder-tool.html
https://helpx.adobe.com/illustrator/atv/cs5-tutorials/creating-complex-art-with-the-shape-builder-tool.html

https://helpx.adobe.com/illustrator/using/live-paint-groups.html