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With the art open in Illustrator, use the Object>Path>Clean up option. Look for stray points. This is often the cause of large bounding boxes.
Also, I recommend placing, not pasting as a general rule.
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Why don't you Place the Ai file in your InDesign document and scale it to size?
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Seems like a lot of work:(
I have multiple designs and just the thought of doing it to each one makes my head dizzy
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Seems like a lot of work:(
I have multiple designs and just the thought of doing it to each one makes my head dizzy
By @Yoni34575889derh
It doesn't have to be - is there a "pattern"?
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No I illustrate the character my self
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I open a file and make a bunch of characters and then paste each one into Indesign
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If they all need to be the same size - you can define Object Style with hardcoded size - and apply after pasting.
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Sorry, how can I do it?
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In the ObjectStyle go to "Size and Position Options" > Choose "Adjust - Height and Width" - set to your specific dimensions.
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Thank you!
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Illustrator have ArtBoards, etc. - so you need to "release" / ungroup them first - but I'm not an advanced user of Illustrator. I'm pretty sure @Monika Gause would be much better source of information.
And as @Derek Cross suggested - you should Place - just in case you'll have to replace / update those graphics in the future... But you'll have to "separate" them first anyway.
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How did you select that in Illustrator? Select all?
Is there perhaps a hidden element in the group? Maybe a guide? Check the Layers panel for that.
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I checked and there are none. But I got the correct answer so thank you for your time monika
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If your purpose is to bring "live" line art into InDesign (which can then be edited in InDesign) then copy and paste would be the correct way to go. Just make sure that rather than doing a Select-All of the object in Illustrator you use the regular Selection tool (black arrow) to draw a "marquee" around the object and then control-c that. If you are simply bringing Illustrator art that will always be edited in Illustrator then you should always do as Derek suggests and use File/Place to import the art.
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Hi @Yoni34575889derh ,
what happens if you ungroup the pasted object from Illustrator?
Would the bounding box shrink to the desired object?
Or do you see other objects selected so the bigger bounding box makes any sense?
Regards,
Uwe Laubender
( Adobe Community Expert )
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Sorry didn't see it in time so I can't tell you but I got the correct answer. So thank you for trying to help
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I unsaved and checked and there are two text anchor points in my artwork which is why I didn't even notice
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With the art open in Illustrator, use the Object>Path>Clean up option. Look for stray points. This is often the cause of large bounding boxes.
Also, I recommend placing, not pasting as a general rule.
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Hello @Yoni34575889derh,
I hope you are doing well.
We wanted to follow up on the status of your issue. Were you able to resolve it by following our expert's advice? If so, please share the solution that worked for you, as it may help others in the community experiencing a similar issue.
Feel free to update the discussion if you need any further assistance.
Thank you,
Abhishek Rao
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Thank you! That do worked from me!
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Thank you! That does work for me!