![]() One issue I only discovered by examining your file is that any strokes that use pressure sensitivity, i.e., a pressure profile on the stroke also get rasterised, so the head, hair, hand, eyebrow, eye etc., so if you want to maintain the stroke integrity, as in the stroke width variations, you would first have to expand all the strokes to prevent them being rasterised which gives you the added issue of having to deal with loads of additional layers once you load the file in After Effects (AE). Any layer that uses one of the AD fx options will be rasterised, with, it appears, the exception of the mask outer shadow fx (which seems to be Photoshop compatible), so the mask and helmet straps' 3D fx and the helmet's gaussian blur fx end up rasterised as does the logo on both the helmet and the overalls which is an embedded PNG file and so is rasterised by default. ![]() PSD probably gives you the closest match when it comes to maintaining your source AD layer structure and grouping however, a number of layers end up rasterised (as you've already seen). If After Effects is your weapon of choice you basically have four file format options you could use if you want to keep your illustration completely in vector format. ![]() this will give you the version shown on the right, i.e., no background. I'll try and cover these below.įirstly with regards the white background, this shouldn't appear at all regardless of the exported file format if you select the graphics and choose Selection Only from the Export Dialogue window. Okay, so there are various issues, some are file format specific, others are AD specific. They all have issues wither adding white background or rasterizing effects, or ungrouping the grouped items Sk far i tried different types of eps and psd. ![]() I wanted to know the best workflow for using the illustrations designed in affinity for after effects. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |