5 Must Know Pathfinder Tricks in Adobe Illustrator CC

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
(magical jingle) Hey everybody, I'm Nathaniel Dodson from tutvid.com, welcome right into this Adobe Illustrator tutorial. Where we're going to cover five tips and tricks for the path finder panel, that you maybe have not known about before. The path finder is such an incredibly useful tool when it comes to shape building in Adobe Illustrator. And the more you know about how to work with path finder, the more you're not going to feel like you're running into a situation where you can't figure out how to make a shape in Illustrator. And making shapes is kind of the name of the game when you're working with most types of illustration, maybe not all. But a lot of them. If you enjoy this tutorial, make sure you go ahead and subscribe to YouTube channel so you never miss any video editing, well, not video editing, who cares about that? There are video editing tutorials over there, but graphic design related, Photoshop, Illustrator, you name it, those kind of tutorials, they're all here on the channel. Subscribe so you never miss them, and let's jump into Adobe Illustrator right now, and check this thing out. Alright, here we are in Adobe Illustrator. I'm going to open up the path finder panel, because that's what we're going to talk about here. You can find it under Window> Path Finder. If you've never used it before, well, stick around, because you can do an awful lot with a path finder. I've got some shapes here that I've been messing around with, and playing with. Actually, all this stuff over here, I thought I was going to incorporate into the video, but it's not really - but I thought it looked kind of cool, so I'm just going to leave it there. Let's take a look at this little, courthouse-looking shape first. I want to show you couple things here with this, with regard to the path finder panel. So let's select this, and let's actually grab these three rounded rectangle, extended pill shapes. And I'm going to go Object>Arrange, I'm going to bring these to the front, so they're on top. We can do something where we select all these shapes, and we say, hey look, a path finder, minus front. And what this is going to do, is it's going to take those front shapes, and it's going to just use them to punch a hole in the stuff behind it. Now, you can see, we only really got one object left, and we're kind of stuck with that object. So it's a little messy. With something like this, you might be better off creating a compound shape. And you can do this, by ALT/OPT clicking on that shape mode. And you can see, it looks different. But, it doesn't look as different as we want, because we still want the top of the courthouse to be there. Let's undo it one more time, and I'm going to select the top and bottom of the courthouse shapes, and I'm going to group them. Object>Group, and now I'm going to select everything. ALT/OPT click on the shape mode, and there we go. Now we preserve the top and bottom of the courthouse, and we have the cutouts that we want. But the cool thing about the compound shape, is you can double click to get within it. And you can take the shapes that make up a compound shape, and adjust them, and push them around wherever you want them to go. So we could take the shape, essentially, that looks like that, and we could, you know what? We could do this, or I could push this down, and it almost looks a little bit more like an airplane. Maybe I could take the bottom shape, if I double click into here, I'm sorry, not double click into here. Use the direct selection arrow. Select that. I could shift this up a little bit. Maybe something like that. And we have more of, I don't know, some sort of bizarre looking airplane shape. The point is, when you're working in a compound shape, like this, you preserve all of your shapes. And you're able to go in and continue editing the compound shape you've created, if you decide you want to move these shapes around later. Maybe the client says they want the pillars to be quite a bit narrower and closer together, something like that. And you can easily come in, and just shift them around like that. And that's all you need to do, you don't need to redraw the entire shape, or go in and delete a bunch of anchor points, and join a bunch of anchor points together, and mess around with stuff like that. So there is some merit to ALT/OPT clicking on some of these modes over here in path finder, and creating a compound shape. Instead of just willy-nilly going and punching holes, and joining stuff together, just like you normally would. So, the next shape I want to talk about, is this interesting-looking shape here where I have a number of rounded rectangles that are overlaid over this rectangle that I've cut all these shapes into. And I'm looking at this, and I decide, you know what? I want all of these to be merged together, so I can select them all, and I can use the merge function here in path finder. And then I decided, I'm looking at it, and I want these shapes - I want to drag these straight down to like here. The problem is, you can see, I've got these teal lines that are left behind. And they're left behind because there are anchor points that are left behind there. You can see all these anchor points along here that are left behind. Well, we can get rid of most, if not all of these anchor points on a regular basis. I'm going to undo this to get me back to just my normal shapes. There's an option here in the path finder panel, under path finder options called remove redundant points. Redundant, extra, unnecessary points. So now I can select all this stuff, I can choose merge, and you can see, sure enough, virtually all of those extra points are gone. There are a couple that are still there, and it's probably because the path is not 100% aligned and precise as it should be, and that's something that I would need to go in and fix, but everywhere where it's lined up perfectly, we don't have that over abundance of extra anchor points. And at this point, we could grab these rounded points, drag them all the way down, and we have no weird, funky lines that are being left behind. Alright, for the third shape, and the third tip, I should say. I'm going to drag over these two ellipses to select them, and what I'm going to do, is come into my path finder drop down or flyout menu, and choose to make these two shapes a compound shape, right off the bat. You can see what I've got here now, is this donut shape. And if I double click into my compound shape, because I just didn't use a shape and punch a hole randomly in the middle of it using minus front, I can still select this circle, and adjust this and line it up exactly as I wish. There's a lot that I can do here. Now, in this case, I probably just want to leave it in the center and keep my little donut shape. And then hit the escape key to get out of isolation mode. And I have this nice donut shape. But, again, very important to note: it is very editable. You can go in there, and here I'm just selecting with my direct selection tool, and you can go in there and move it around, and change things up, just as you wish, very, very easily. Alright, let's move down over here. And the fourth thing I want to show you, is if we take something like this. This shape. It's just essentially a titled square, and it's going to be cutting a piece out of the front of this donut shape to make the letter 'c.' But, for whatever reason, I want to save some of the pieces of the shape, so instead of going with a minus front, I'm going to go with the divide function here. So, I'm going to go divide, and this is going to put all this stuff, as you can see here in the layers panel, it's putting it all into this group. I can ungroup it, CMD/CTRL+SHIFT+G , and I've got this shape here, I've got this shape on the ring, whoop! I don't want to double click into it. I've got that shape of the ring, I've got this little piece here, but I also have this just blank, empty path that's unused in there. It's kind of annoying when you have this stuff. Because if I were to select this, and say, you know what? Instead of this being the seafoam green, I actually want to move it to more of a light blue. But, when I select everything, obviously, this unfilled path gets selected and filled, as well. So, again, we have the option in Illustrator, in the path finder panel, under path finder options to divide an outline, we'll remove unpainted artwork. So, stuff that doesn't have a filler stroke, get rid of that stuff! I'm going to say, yeah, go for it. Give it to me. So, I'm going to these, now I'm going to divide, and I'm going to ungroup. CMD/CTRL+SHIFT+G, and I'm going to select the shapes one at a time, there's that shape. There's that shape. There's that shape. And there's nothing left in the center. All we have, is our nice letter 'c' and if I select all this stuff, I can easily change the color, and nothing else is affected. So the last thing I want to show you, the fifth little tip and trick. The hidden tip and trick in path finder, is the ability to quickly and easily repeat a path finder operation with a hotkey. So this is really used for when you're working on very intricate illustrations, and building very complex shapes. I find it particularly useful when I'm outlining artwork, and I just have a lot of pieces that are going, and either need to be merged together or divided apart, or whatever it may be. Being able to execute something that's going on over in the path finder panel that you need to do a bunch of times in a row with a hotkey, is nice, because instead of disengaging your mouse, and moving from here all the way to wherever your path finder is and back, you can just bam! bam! bam! bam! bam! use a hotkey! So, what we can do, is we could select two of these rings here, right? See these rings? And, maybe I just want to merge them together, so I'm going to choose the little merge option here, and now they're merged together. Now, I didn't realize at the time when I selected these, that maybe I wanted to merge the next one. So, what I can do, is I can use the flyout menu, and there is the repeat merge option. And I don't know why, it makes it even more difficult to go into a flyout menu, to hit repeat merge. The only thing I can think, is maybe they made it a menu option so a hotkey could be assigned to it. And that's the hotkey I want to talk about, and it is CMD/CTRL and the number 4. And then we can select by SHIFT clicking the next ring, CMD/CTRL+4. And then, we see them, we're like, yeah, that's pretty cool. I actually want to move this up here maybe, kind of like this. Something like that. We're going to nudge this until it looks about like that. And then we're going to select all these shapes, and CMD/CTRL+4. And we just go ahead, and merge all these shapes together into this one, very, very much more complex shape than what we had. And then, if we look at our big rings, and we say, you know what? We actually want all these merged together, as well. CMD/CTRL+4, boom! They're all merged together, just like that. One giant shape that easily. A little CMD/CTRL+4 to just repeat the previously used path finder operation here in the panel. It, actually, is much more useful than it sounds at first glance, especially if you're working with complex shapes, and complex illustrations, where you just want to quickly be able to grab a couple shapes and boom! Perform an action that you've been performing all day long. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is it for this one. If you enjoyed it, again, make sure you subscribe to the YouTube channel, so you never miss any Illustrator tutorials in the future. And you can give me a follow over there on Instagram, if you do the Instagram thing. That'd be cool, as well. But, for now, for repeating a path finder action, for removing redundant points, for deleting unfilled artwork, and all the other stuff about path finders that we covered in this casual jaunt through the path finder panel in Adobe Illustrator, ladies and gentlemen. That is it! Get it? Got it? Good! Nathaniel Dodson, tutvid.com, I'll catch you in the next one! (upbeat music) And before you go, make sure you subscribe to my channel for more great tutorials every day! Also, buy my course! It helps us do what we do and this channel is supported by viewers just like you! You can also just click the thumbnail, and watch another video from this channel! See you next time, guys. (upbeat music)
Info
Channel: tutvid
Views: 69,789
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: illustrator tutorial, illustrator, tutorial, design, adobe illustrator, illustration, how to, graphic design, adobe illustrator tutorial, adobe illustrator (software), adobe illustrator cc, illustrator tutorials, adobe illustrator pathfinder, adobe illustrator pathfinder tutorial, illustrator pathfinder, illustrator pathfinder tutorial, merge tool tutorial, unite tutorial, illustrator merge tool, illustrator unite tool, adobe illustrator cc tutorial using pathfinder, AI
Id: o_V9C6yLeEk
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 9min 45sec (585 seconds)
Published: Fri Mar 30 2018
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.