How to Create Geometric Line Art in Second Using Power Duplicate Affinity Designer Tutorial
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- čas přidán 5. 08. 2024
- In Affinity Designer, if you duplicate an object and then transform the duplicate, you can immediately duplicate this transformed object. A duplicate is created and the transform is automatically applied to the duplicate it's called a power duplicate.
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You just showed me something that will make a lot of projects easier, thanks!
Great to hear!
Learnt something new today. Thank you.
I'm new to design and learning so many useful tricks from your videos :) thank you for sharing :)
Happy to help!
I loved this video
I really look forward to your videos. I do learn something new at each download.
Happy to hear that! ^_^
Actually there's no need to CMD-drag the shape to duplicate it...
1. Create the shape
2. Directly hit CMD+J (STRG+J)
3. Adjust the duplicated shape (rotate, scale etc.)
4. Hit CMD+J (STRG+J) as often as you like
Saves some time :)
Thanks for this, its actually a great time saver
Good fun!
Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for watching!
Again a great and helpful video - always a great pleasure -thanks.
Thanks again!
Thank you so much for this concepts
You're so welcome!
Really helpfull, thank you!
You're welcome!
interesting to see the invisible rings that appear within some of the shapes
Nice Tutorial! 👍👍👍
thanks!
Excellent tutorial for Ctrl J function - Shame they didn't keep the Transformation function from Serif Draw - much easier to use as you input the parameters into 1 x box (i.e. you choose any or all: rotation, scale, x and y axis movement, no. of copies to apply it to). So, if you were spiralling a square to a point in the centre and it took 150 shapes, you didn't have to click Ctrl J 150 times!!!! And, if you didn't like the end result, in Serif it was simply 1 x Ctrl Z to clear the lot which allows you to try out lots of different parameters very quickly. I still use Serif - Affinity is new to me, too complicated for what I want but it doesn't crash quite as often as Serif but probably because I can't do things as quickly.
Ah well, still quicker than hand drawing them....although I miss the meditative experience!
FYI - if you want to spiral a triangle without the points overlapping the sides, the Triangle tool is not equilateral, for that you need to use the Polygon tool and reduce the No. of sides to 3.
This is neat, though now I am wondering how to select the individual inner shapes that are created so I can color them without selecting the whole square.
I can't rotate and ensure each corner is snapped to the previous square edge. Perhaps if all corners were without gap, the fill would work? Anyway to account for close enough with the strokes?
Not sure if I've understood what you were trying to do with the fill or if you have worked this out (apologies if so) but I just managed to fill the little shapes left when putting a rotated square on a square (points of the rotated square touching the edges of the original square) and have each of the 4 new little shapes created, coloured differently - I selected all the squares (Ctrl A), then choose the Shape Builder tool - set it to "add" (+) and individually clicked all the little shapes I wanted to colour (have to click them individually, if you click and drag you'll join all the shapes together). Then, using the fill bucket tool I was able to fill in each of the little shapes with different colours. Not sure if there is an easier/quicker way, but that worked for me (very time consuming on a pattern with 150 objects all requiring 4 x shapes on each to be filled individually though).
How can this be achieved in Affinity Designer? czcams.com/video/yCyE91-D-KI/video.htmlsi=fbiPYp7ttebDhb4Z