How to filll an image made with the pen tool

when i change the fill, only half goes through properly. its probably a simple fix, im just not sure what im doing wrong. Any ideas will help!

Duignanator,
Based on my (mis)understanding the description:
Are you sure you (only) have one full (closed) path?
You can see it in the Layers palette/panel or in the Document Infor palette/panel.

Similar Messages

  • How to adjust a selection made with the Pen Tool

    We are designing images for the new iPhone 5. I'm facing some difficulty with the pen tool I select. Just wondering whether it is possbile to make add areas those which are in subtract area. If I wrolgly click the area which I don't want, I need to spen lots of time refining my selection. Is there any shortcuts or easy way to switch between the path nodes to add
    Thanks & regards
    Noel
    (Personal information removed)
    Message was edited by: Kendall Plant

    Good day!
    Each individual SubPathItem’s Shape Operation can be changed manually later on and their order can also be changed.
    Could you please post a screenshot to illustrate your specific issue?
    Regards,
    Pfaffenbichler

  • How Do I make curved lines with the pen tool in after effects CS6

    Hello, so I have been following this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKzB-CFT0MI on how to make 2d intros in after effects and at the 2:20 mark he shows how he uses the pen tool to make curved lines around the elipse. I tried to do the samething myself, and couldent make the curved lines. I looked it up online and there were tutorials on how to make curved lines but they did not work the same way, and I could not make curves like he did.So if any of you know how to do curved lines like in the video, your help will be appreciated.
    Thanks !

    This is basic stuff and it's basically the same way Illustrator or Photoshop works with bezier paths. You'll find a lot of helpful information if you just type masking or mask in the Search After Effects Help field at the top right corner of the app.
    Adobe - Search: masking
    Directly from the Help Files: After Effects Help | Creating shapes and masks
    Mylenium.. sorry you thought it was an awful tutorial. I made it in under a minute just to show this member the very basic task of creating a mask with the pen tool and animating the shape. I'll try and up the quality of my quick replies to simple operations.

  • How to create a wavy line with the Pen Tool?

    Let me start by saying that I am a novice to Adobe CS4, including PS.
    I am trying to follow this tutorial: http://www.rnel.net/tutorial/Photoshop/11541 but I can not even get the pen to draw wavvy line. I keep get a straight line. To say the least, I am only able to complete creating the file.
    How do I create a wavvy line or lines using the Pen Tool?

    Check out this page from the Help Files:
    Draw curves with the Pen tool:
    http://help.adobe.com/en_US/Photoshop/11.0/WS08E4D386-15E9-4dcd-91E6-DF4219CC6D24.html

  • Drawing with the Pen tools

    This question was posted in response to the following article: http://help.adobe.com/en_US/photoshop/cs/using/WSfd1234e1c4b69f30ea53e41001031ab64-73a0a.h tml

    Correction: same issue -- pen tool drawing shows up only on the digital image on the screen. Not when printed. Well sounded like a good theory.
    Problem remains: how to get pen tool drawing, made on photographs, to print.
    From: [email protected]
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: Drawing with the Pen tools o photographi
    Date: Sat, 5 May 2012 20:08:05 +0000
    Curt, believe I found the answer:
    Create a new blank page, the size of the photograph to be worked on. The blank page is what the pen tool responds to only.
    Add the photographic image to the new blank page (same size).
    Now you can use the pen tool over the photographic image. When finished drawing, flatten the image with drawing, and print. 
    Date: Fri, 4 May 2012 21:00:54 -0600
    From: [email protected]
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: Drawing with the Pen tools
        Re:  Drawing with the Pen tools
        created by Curt Y in Photoshop General Discussion - View the full discussion
    Perhaps you are talking about stroking the line? 
    Set the color and size with brush, then in Path window click on Stroke Path with Brush.
         Replies to this message go to everyone subscribed to this thread, not directly to the person who posted the message. To post a reply, either reply to this email or visit the message page: http://forums.adobe.com/message/4380667#4380667
         To unsubscribe from this thread, please visit the message page at http://forums.adobe.com/message/4380667#4380667. In the Actions box on the right, click the Stop Email Notifications link.
         Start a new discussion in Photoshop General Discussion by email or at Adobe Forums
      For more information about maintaining your forum email notifications please go to http://forums.adobe.com/message/2936746#2936746.

  • Creating a bell-shapped (Gaussian) curve with the Pen Tool

    Hello everyone,
    I'm trying to create a bell-shaped (Gaussian) curve in Photoshop CS3, using the Pen Tool, however apparently I am not good enough with it... I can create a curve that resembles a simple parabola - like this one http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_BhBX8ycVeL4/SIHhJYmDCgI/AAAAAAAAA-g/2Dc_Tf1Kz5c/s400/400px-Para bola.svg.png only upside-down; however I can't figure out how to further go from here in order to add the extra inflexions on the sides that make the parabola into a Gaussian curve, that would look something like this: http://naturalcureinsomnia.com/img/Bell-Curve.gif
    Can anyone help? Thanks in advance!

    Art,
    Correct me if I'm wrong---I believe you want a schematic Gaussian curve rather than a mathematically precise one.
    If so, set up two horizontal guide lines, one running through the desired apex and the other through the curve's baseline. Add three vertical guides, one through the apex and the other two equally spaced on the left and right sides of the guide through the apex.
    Let point A be at the intersection of the left vertical with the baseline, point B be the apex, and point C be the intersection of the right vertical with the baseline.
    With the pen tool at point A, drag horizontally to the right a fraction of the distance to the central guide. Release the mouse, move the pen tool to point B and drag horizontally to the right about the same distance or until the left half of the curve looks Gaussian. Release the mouse, place the pen tool at point C and drag horizontally rightward until the right half of the Gaussian curve matches the left.
    To close the curve, release the mouse and click at a point on the baseline well beyond point C, connect from below with a path of any shape to a point on the baseline well to the left of point A, and then close to point A. Stroke the path, delete the path, and erase all but the Gaussian part.
    Experiment with the ABC positions and the drag lengths until you get a decent curve. Should you want a precise curve it would be better to use one of the freeware curve programs out there. But if you want a bit of precision with the pen tool, that's possible by calculating one or two intermediate points between A and B and symmetrically between B and C and then dragging the pen so that curve comes reasonably close to passing through them.

  • Better ways to work with the pen tool

    I'm finding the pen tool a real aggravation to use... first off you cannot hardly see the points once a path is completed.  Even blowing the artwork up really big doesn't help much.
    Then its really easy to loose the ability to move individual points... at least I've found that at one point I can select and move the points easily with keyboard and somehow I loose that ability and seems to difficult to regain it.  Instead I'm moving the whole path.
    I wondered if any of the plugins out there might be dedicated to making the pen tool points easier to manipulate and edit.  Just making them easily visible would probably be enough.

    Jacob Bugge wrote:
    Harry,
    The Direct Selection Tool is the one to use for moving Anchor Points after the path has been drawn. Always work on paths without anything selected when you start; this is one place where Smart Guides are your friends because they let you see highlights of what you may select.
    If you Click an Anchor Point, you will see that it is shown as a filled square; the other (non selected) Anchor Points are shown as hollow squares; you can select additional Anchor Points by ShiftClicking them.
    With the desired Anchor Point(s) chosen, you may ClickDrag (either of them), or use the Arrow keys, or Object>Transform>Move, to move it/them.
    You can also ClickDrag across the desired Anchor Point(s), starting from an empty spot with no fill (normally outside the path).
    If I'm following you above... I do not see that behavior here.  I speaking particularly of your third and fourth points.
    You are talking about doing point 3 and 4 with direct select right?
    To make it simple I'll just work with one point on a closed path  :... I first click on an empty part of art board, then click a single point.  At that point all the points light up and show there handles.  The clicked one is a solid red dot, the others are a hollow dot with red stroke.
    Now according to what I got of your comments, I should be able to move that single selected point with the arrow keys.... but I cannot.
    Far as point 4, same thing applies... It is good to know that I can select multiple points that way, but after selecting ... the keyboard arrows do nothing to the selected points.   But at least I can quickly pull mutiple points around with the mouse... so thanks for that bit.
    Are you able to select a point on a closed path, and control it with arrow keys?
    Is there some circumstance I may have initiated inadvertantly that would prevent the arrow keys moving points around.
    I pretty sure there was while early on where I was moving individual points with keyboard but cannot get it to happen now.

  • Problem with the pen tool creating a fill when I only want stroke

    Hi,
    I'm having an issue. I am creating a simple spider for a project. Initally I used the pen tool to make legs. It worked for a bit then all the sudden started filling in an area I didn't even draw with color. I'm not sure what I did to cause this to happen. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks

    That shape shows a Yellow fill, probably from the last shape you drew.  If you select the shape and deselect the fill, then your drawing will go back to Black strokes only.

  • Mysterious issues with the pen tool in flash (CS3 & CS4)

    i have searched tirelessly for the answer to this problem and still have no answer. when using the pen tool to create shapes, occasionanally when i click to add the next point the line segment jumps over to a previously added point. also, sometimes when i add a point, the point mysteriously starts moving on the screen all by itself. i have used illustrator for many years and it's pen tool is perfect in so many ways and it is counterproductive to have to jump to illustrator to do any pen tool work and then import it into flash
    anybody have this issue or know why this might be happening?

    Hello
    I have the same issue. I think it is a bug.
    Sometimes when I  delete points with <delete> key on keyboard, flash also deletes randomly frames on locked layers with all of its contents.
    You have to start tricking over these issues, if you do not want to be nervous. Like using a one key -shortcut substitute of Ctrl+Z
    Sometimes it's happening, because there are not perfectly overlapping shapes on each other on one layer, .
    Sometimes because there are a parenting issue, flash sometimes breaks, if you draw to deep under the "root" of the
    project.
    Or if you have a lot of vectrice on one layer. But I am just guessing too.

  • The lines I create with the pen tool are not showing up in After Effects.

    I'm working on a project where I need straight lines. I've added the lines using the pen tool on solid layers, but they are not showing up before or after rendering. I can see where they are supposed to be when I isolate the layer they are on. I have the lines at one pixel, solid white and the layers are on top of everything else. I took a screen shot. Can anyone help me?

    Well, I am still not 100% sure why the pen tool lines/masks are not showing up but I was able to work around it. I already had the stroke effect applied and set to all masks. Looking into this though, it seemed that they were only not showing up on the new solid layers I had created. I duplicated the layers the masks were  working on instead and it seems to resolve the problem for now. Thanks for your help!

  • I am trying to cut out an image with the pen tool and when i make a selection it selects the whole image and not the cut out. How do i stop this?

    The selection basically inverts when I dont want it to do that! Any help would be great, its becoming very annoying.
    Thanks

    It sounds like you need to change your path operations?
    Is it showing:
    change to:

  • Using the pen tool, how best should I build or construct this image?

    Hello,
    I'm trying to recreate a certain image with the pen tool.
    I have already tried using Live Trace using the "Simple Trace" setting. Live Trace did a pretty good job but not with enough accuracy or fidelity to the original image as I would like.
    I am pretty rusty with Illustrator now, but I remember from past lessons that the basic idea is that artwork in Illustrator is divided into layers, objects, and elements within objects. But one of the biggest principles with Ilustrator is the order these layers, objects, and elements are stacked. Elements are stacked to create an object. Objects are often stacked, each object on its own layer, to create the entire piece of artwork.
    Also, the lower an element, object, or layer is in a stacking order, the further towards the back it appears in the image.
    Also, the higher an element, object, or layer is in a stacking order, the closer to the front it appears in the image.
    So, in Illustrator, you don't so much draw or paint a piece of artwork, but, instead, creating artwork in Illustrator is more a matter of building it or constructing it.
    So, with all that said, below I have an object I would like to create with the pen tool. It is a fleuron. It is at least fairly complex.I am not sure how to build it or construct its parts. What would come first, second, third? What would be on the bottom layer, middle layer, top layer, etc.? 
    I know there is no one way to reproduce this object with the pen tool. Whatever way you would use or would like to share is fine. I guess, more specifically, I'm not afraid of rigor and working hard, but I'm also not necessarily looking for rigor. Instead, what I am looking to do is work smartly and efficiently. I'm looking for what might commonly be considered "best practice." 
    So, how would you advise I approach the object below? How should I build or construct it?
    Thanks!  : )

    As for the simple graphic itself, this is what I would end up with:
    One Group containing:
    One red-filled, unstroked Compound Path consisting of three subpaths.
    One white-filled, unstroked Compound Path consisting of 18 subpaths.
    The reason I would compound the red paths and the white paths is simply so I could apply to them different fills with one move, should I want to.
    The reason the two Compund Paths would be grouped is simply so the whole graphic can, when finished, be moved, rotated, scaled, flipped, skewed (i.e.; transformed) as if it were a single object. (Which it would be; a Group is a logical object, just as a "set" is a logical object.)
    As for how I would actaully draw the graphic:
    First I would roughly evaluate it to get an idea of what I want to end up with in terms of clean, tidy, paths (as already describe above.)
    Second, I mentally devise a "plan of attack" by which to achieve that; just studying the shapes a little more deeply for anything that can be exploited to minimize the work:
    Are there any repetitive elements of the shape that can be accomplished by duplication, moving, scaling?
    Is there any symmetry that can be accomplished by duplication and flopping?
    Is there any simple geometry that can be accomplished with basic shape prmitives (whole or partial ellipses, rectangles, polygons)?
    Third, I always try to also consider whether the process of drawing the current graphic and/or portions of it might be of future use to me, and if so, can I exploit other software features to save me time and effort later. For example, consider a single one of the ess-shaped "coils" of the middle tapered "spiral" grouped together with its white highlight. Such a graphic, colored in black and white and stored as an ArtBrush with its Colorization set to Hues & Tints would let me stretch and scale that basic shape along other-shaped paths. Similarly stored as a PatternBrush, it might do multi-duty for many things suggestive of coils, like rope or jewelry chains.
    Then I just start drawing the necessary paths, using my default Graphic Style (.25 black stroke, no fill). As I proceed, I store (as Brushes, Symbols, etc.) any intermediate things that I think I might find useful later. For the graphic at hand, I then optimize the paths I've drawn by combining them (cutting, joining, path operations) into the fewest, cleanest, and simplest paths necessary to define the shapes. I then store the finished graphic as a Symbol, Brush, etc. if I think it might be of use later.
    Regarding Layers, Groups, etc., etc:
    It sounds like you (like many beginning AI users) are way over-thinking the matter of stacking order. Yes, it's good to use some sensible amount of organization as your illustrations and designs become more elaborate, but you don't have to fret so much over it. The principles are very very simply.
    Layer really don't even enter into my mind when creating such a graphic, because the paths of which it consists are all going to be grouped, and all the contents of a Group have to exist on the same Layer anyway. Multiple Layers would only come into play when this whole graphic is used as one element in the overall page layout. For example, suppose several instances of this object will exist on a page layout to serve as dividers between ads or stories arranged in columns in a page layout. I may choose--if it makes organizational sense to me--to put all the copies of this object on a Layer dedicated to them. The Layer on which they reside may or may not include other graphics; it's just a question of what makes organizational sense and editing convenience to me while I'm working the file. For example, having the copies of this graphic on a separate Layer would allow me to lock that Layer to avoid accidently selecting the graphics when I'm editing text objects that I've organized on another Layer.
    Don't think of Layers as some oppressive "right or wrong" thing that you have to decide upon at the start of every little thing you draw. It's nothing but an organizational convenience that is driven almost entirely by common sense. The mechanics of it are really very very simple in principle.
    Look: Everything you create or import in an Illustrator document is an object. Just like sheets of paper in a tablet, each of those objects (each path, text object, raster image) is going to reside somewhere in the z-order (think front to back) of the document's object stack. You can't do anything to prevent that. It's the way the program works. The file is basically just a list of things that the output device has to draw. Being a list, it has a first object, a second object, and so on. Objects higher in that list are nearer the "front"; objects lower are nearer the "back." Normally, objects in front obscure objects behind them, wherever they "overlap."
    Now, considering that what you have is just a list of objects, as that list grows and grows, doesn't it eventually just make sense to be able to "bracket" or "label" contiguous portions (contiguous is key here) of that list for organizational and manipulative purposes? That's all Groups and Layers are; brackets around sections of the list.
    Consider that an Illustrator file (like most computer files you create) is really just a text file. So suppose you have written a technical manual in a word processing program. Would you write that manual as one big, honkin' text string, or would you "bunch together" contiguous portions of the story under some labeling scheme of subheads? After that, wouldn't you similarly "bunch together" contiguous subhead sections as chapters?
    So you can think of Groups as "subheads," and Layers as "chapters" in your Illustrator document's list of objects.
    Sure; if you're working on a page layout document, sometimes it makes sense to go ahead and set up some of this structure at the start (just as when writing a book, it makes sense to start with an outline). So you might go ahead and define a Layer for printer marks, another for the diecut, another for text, another for images, another for background fills.
    The very next designer might decide to structure the very same project a little differently. He might, for example, decide there's no reason not to keep the text objects on the same layer with the raster images. There's no hard & fast right & wrong her. You do what makes sense for the project at hand.
    Now in this context, back to your simple graphic: I don't need a PrinterMarks Layer, a DieCut Layer, or a TextObjects Layer to draw this graphic. I just need the default Layer 1. For convenience, I may want to add a TraceThisStuff Layer onto which I put the original raster image, just so I can conveniently isolate it (lock it, dim it, etc.) while drawing the paths on Layer 1. On the other hand, I can really just as easily leave the raster image that I want to trace on Layer 1 and reduce its opacity and lock/unlock it at the object level. It's up to me.
    But for that matter, revisit my "third level" of evaluation described above. In reality, I would very likely not even start drawing this graphic in the document for which it is intended. I would just as likely open an existing JET_Dingbats.ai or a JET_Ornaments.ai or CustomerName_StyleGraphics.ai file or template, draw the graphic there and when done, just copy it and paste it into the current document file. That's how you, over time, build yourself a reasonably organized "personal library" of re-usable resources that save you countless hours of repetitive work in the future.
    JET

  • How do I create a logotype with the letters in 2 different colours

    I need help with a logo. I'm trying to create a logo were it's as though a lamp is shining on the type so part of the letters are in 2 different colours.

    Set the type using the point text tool (meaning click then type, not click-drag-release then type). Use two type objects, one for each line.
    Draw the path for the light with the pen tool, fill it with yellow, and move it to the back (Object > Arrange > Send to Back).
    Select the top line of text and the spotlight and go to Object > Clipping Mask > Make.
    Now select just the type objects with the Direct Select tool (white arrow) and fill them with blue.

  • Creating a link with the Link Tool

    I used the Link Tool to create a Link in my pdf file.  The link is set to open a website file.  I created 2, one with just a little text and the other was a picture that was 200 X 300 px.  When I follow the links, each is opening a full web page.  I expected that with the Text link because I put the text on an html page but the picture I sized to the 200X300 but that opened a full web page also.  When setting up the link to the Web File I did not see an additional settings as far as how to open the web page such as _parent or _child etc.  I believe it is normally the Target.
    Does anyone know how I would either do this with the link tool or know of a better way to do it overall?
    Thanks
    Bob

    Hi,
    You may be confusing HTML markup for links with PDF links.
    In PDF, HTML markup is not applicable.
    So "target_xxxx" or any other HTML 'stuff' cannot be used.
    For the graphic file (JPG, PNG, whatever), make a web page file that is configured to display the graphic file in a manner you desire.
    The web link you set in the PDF, with Acrobat, will result in this web page file opening.
    This is the file that will control how the graphic is rendered.
    If needed, a resource for HTML "how to" is W3 Schools.
    Be well...

  • Help with using the pen tool

    I have a few different problems with the pen tool.
    1. When using the pen tool I keep finding that the shape I'm doing is slightly overlapping where I've already gone with the pen tool.
    If I try and go over that area again the path I've just drawn then jumps and ruins the shape I was creating.
    How can I stop this from happening?
    2. Also is there a limit to the amount of paths you can create and add text to? I created two paths and typed on them fine but when I added a third path it refused to type. The cursor didn't change to show I could type and if I did click on the path line and try to type jumped to my other path and typed there. All paths were on different layers and none were overlapping, but it is 3 circles inside each other that get smaller if this makes a difference.
    How can I type on the third path?
    3. When I have done a path and clicked stroke it is only a thin line. How can I make this line thicker?
    Thanks.

    Ok, the first example would be something like this. Pretending the lines go elsewhere, say I've drawn a path with the pen tool, gone round the bottom box and that then goes round the two lines going down. So if I go down the one on the left side it hits the previous path I did, but to go up the line on the right side I'd need to go across there. But if I make a point where the two lines meet to do this it then throws the line off elsewhere.
    I did have snap vector tools on but it does that without it on.
    The next one I was creating a car speedometer so it has lines on the outside, dots inside of that and then, where I've done the blue circle, would be the third path where I then write the numbers in. But I can never write on that third path.
    And finally, the pen tool and I think it dd have Shape Dynamics set. I've changed a couple of things and it looks a bit better now so I think that should be ok. Thanks
    I know I haven't shown the panels but I haven't got any for the first as it won't go right so I deleted what I was doing. And each thing I've done is on a different layer for the speedometer, all just paths created with the circle tool with the text on.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Ipad air calender not syncing with iphone 5s calender

    I create an event on my iphone 5s, it shows up on icloud but will not sync with my ipad air? I have searched for a solution with no success help please

  • Connection Pooling in heavy traffic web-applications

    In a 24x7 web-app used by 3000-10000 concurrent users, what is the realistic number of maxmimum connections one should have defined in the application server's connection pool? The app has no caching mechanism therefore every page is a database hit.

  • Cannot connect to Internet even though the BT Hub ...

    Really wacky this - I can see the connection no problem but cannot connect to the internet. Other laptops in the house work ok with the hub. No problem connecting with ethernet cable or by tethering to moblie. Running out of ideas. Everything seems t

  • TNS-01151: Missing listener name - APPS_VIS

    Hi, We completed the installation of E-BIZ Database and Application onto separate VMs via Oracle's eDelivery templates. Both new VMs are up and running per the OVM Manager. However, we are not able to connect to the eBusiness Application. Per the e-B

  • Pacman -S glibc won't continue, conflict on `/lib/libiberty.a`?

    Hello, I've been hit with the recent glibc update that broke a lot of systems. I'm almost done fixing mine, but I'm not sure how to resolve this. For reference, this is what I've done so far. Used the `find /lib -exec pacman -Qo -- {} +` to determine