I had to stop my team doing this. I watched them going round and round the item correcting the points they'd created and going back and adding others. There seemed to be no end to it. This method requires little concentration and the team would chat away, taking hours to produce crap cut-outs.
I insist that the path is drawn accurately as it goes along. This takes concentration and, while progress appears to be slower, in the end it's quicker because when the path is closed, it's finished.
@ArchieRoylance I work by myself, so concentration isn't an issue. If your "team" is chatting while they work, you've got other problems. Crappy paths are always the result of crappy employees.
@ArchieRoylance Before I went freelance, I spent 10 years managing a team of graphic artists and web designers. Precision clips were a must. This technique is really intended for solo clippers who are faced with processing a large amount of photos in a short time. It's also great for low rez, web only shots.
@ArchieRoylance what is the method you are talking about? Would you be willing to share? I want to also say, thank you trideciple. Any information is good to a newbie student of graphic design. I like to think of a result that I'm trying to get in the programs (whether it's photoshop, illustrator, in design...) as the location I want to get to. Like driving to a location in a vehicle, there is more than one way to get somewhere by taking different roads.
No special method, just draw the path accurately as you go along so when you close or complete the path, you know it's finished; you don't have to go back around, adding and adjusting points - I've seen people spend hours doing that and still get poor results.
I am Cong and a Graphic designer. I am form Vietnam - I am working at GLOBAL MASKPRO LTD. We specialize in providing our worldwide customers with low-cost and high-quality picture manipulation service .We specialize in providing our worldwide customers with low-cost and high-quality picture manipulation services.
Comment removed
clippingpathindia 1 month ago
I had to stop my team doing this. I watched them going round and round the item correcting the points they'd created and going back and adding others. There seemed to be no end to it. This method requires little concentration and the team would chat away, taking hours to produce crap cut-outs.
I insist that the path is drawn accurately as it goes along. This takes concentration and, while progress appears to be slower, in the end it's quicker because when the path is closed, it's finished.
ArchieRoylance 2 months ago
@ArchieRoylance I work by myself, so concentration isn't an issue. If your "team" is chatting while they work, you've got other problems. Crappy paths are always the result of crappy employees.
trideciple 1 month ago
@trideciple
You work by yourself, I manage a team of people in a company that was losing money. It's now profitable and the 'team' have jobs. Happy clipping.
ArchieRoylance 1 month ago
@ArchieRoylance Before I went freelance, I spent 10 years managing a team of graphic artists and web designers. Precision clips were a must. This technique is really intended for solo clippers who are faced with processing a large amount of photos in a short time. It's also great for low rez, web only shots.
trideciple 1 month ago
@ArchieRoylance what is the method you are talking about? Would you be willing to share? I want to also say, thank you trideciple. Any information is good to a newbie student of graphic design. I like to think of a result that I'm trying to get in the programs (whether it's photoshop, illustrator, in design...) as the location I want to get to. Like driving to a location in a vehicle, there is more than one way to get somewhere by taking different roads.
CGolds235 3 weeks ago
@CGolds235
No special method, just draw the path accurately as you go along so when you close or complete the path, you know it's finished; you don't have to go back around, adding and adjusting points - I've seen people spend hours doing that and still get poor results.
Hope that's helpful.
ArchieRoylance 3 weeks ago
@ArchieRoylance thank you! I will try this. :)
CGolds235 2 weeks ago
:d
mrazzzzzhristov 4 months ago
I am Cong and a Graphic designer. I am form Vietnam - I am working at GLOBAL MASKPRO LTD. We specialize in providing our worldwide customers with low-cost and high-quality picture manipulation service .We specialize in providing our worldwide customers with low-cost and high-quality picture manipulation services.
conglan1 8 months ago
Para hacer esta demostracion no debe ser tan perfecto, tomas mucho tiempo para hacer algo tan sencillo.
yeralbert01 1 year ago
yup yup. big ups.
Hermanesau 1 year ago
he isn't using independent handles he's just adding more points.....
gerbilpipi 1 year ago
Rename the path to anything other than "Work Path" and it will be saved within the image even when you save it as a jpg.
cphvisuals 2 years ago
how to save the path
SilverGunZoO 2 years ago
how do u embed a clipping path within an image for exporting?
thanks!
FirebrandNIRE 2 years ago