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Hello,
Is it possible to preserve the stroke aspect when applying a 3D rotation effect? In other words, the object would undergo the roration but its stroke would not be thickenned and thinned according to the rotation, it would maintain a constant stroke width appearance throughout the rotated object.
As it is now, when I apply a 3D rotation to an object like a circle, the stroke's width varies after rotation (the stroke's visual appearance, not its stroke size in points, which remains constant).
This is for CS4.
Thanks.
There is the 3D and a pathfinder effect applied to the object itself and then the stroke is applied to the layer. Please check out the Appearances ob both the object and the layer.
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You could check out the Apperarance of the Layer in this file:
https://shared-assets.adobe.com/link/b264bf97-3348-4b57-6349-1d5666b93fe4 Is that what you are planning to do?
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Hi Monika!
No, what I would like is this. The second object is subject to 3D rotate effect. I made the third object manually but I would like it to be just like the second object (circle with 3D effect applied to it), but with a constant aspect stroke.
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Would it work if you expand them as wireframe (or simply expand the appearance) and add a new stroke while no longer 3D? (I would do on a duplicate so you keep the 3D shape intact somewhere)
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I've updated the file.
Check out the Appearance of the Rotated object
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Imaginerie: No, because when expanding, it becomes a filled object and the strokes of the expanded object are no longer in the position of the original stroke (which would be kind of in the middle). Or perhaps I don't know how to do it properly!
Monika: Yes, that would work if the rotation is live and the stroke is live. How did you do it? I might be able to settle for a rotation that is no longer live.
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There is the 3D and a pathfinder effect applied to the object itself and then the stroke is applied to the layer. Please check out the Appearances ob both the object and the layer.
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Thanks Monika. I'll have to get my head around why this achieves the desired result. It looks like the right solution. Thanks again.
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I'll have to get my head around why this achieves the desired result.
By @sPretzel
There is a pathfinder effect included. It's pure magic. I don't think I fully understand it either 🙂
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Monika's solution makes sense! Follow hers instead! 🙂