![]() And in addition I believe the staves are open paths with a certain width. Eventually I want to do everything on Illustrator, as in the attached example - so the notation will just be made up of lines and shapes as in the attached - but I want the exclusion zone around the notation to be precise (I've just used the scissors tool in the attached to break up the grid).Īs I (mis)understand it, you wish to have one and the same specific gap everywhere between the musical notation as a whole and the vertical rhytmic lines, although the gap is shown narower above and beneath the staves in the 3rd image. I've attached a very quick illlustration of what the notation will be like. Is there any chance you could do a version with Illustrator in English, so I can make double sure I know what to do? I've tried resetting the preferences and then uninstalling and re-installing and I can't get that to work. ![]() Not sure if it's just trying to translate it into English, or if something's not working properly - I'm finding that when I click on outline stroke (click to edit effect) it doesn't bring up a window where I can change the position of the stroke to the outside of the shape? That looks exactly like what I want to do, but I'm having some problems following what you did in the video. ![]() I'm working on a form of music notation in which grey lines go vertically throughout the whole score, forming a rhythmic grid as the background on which the music (image 1, notation) will be written (image 2, notation with grid in background).īut for the end result, I would like the music notation in the foreground to be on top of the grid, with the grid cut out where the notation is + a set exclusion zone, so the image doesn’t quite touch the background grid (image 3, finished score) - so similar to text wrap, but where the notation is an image and the rhythmic grid is the text wrapping around it.Ī further complication is that notation is that the wrap could be around lines or shapes, depending on what is at the edge of the image - so even if there’s a way of wrapping round some elements that would still save quite a bit of time!Īnd if there’s no quick way to do this - is there a feature on Illustrator that shows all (or selected) positions/dimensions of the objects in the artboard? Or does this require an add on such as CADtools if you don’t want to click on every object and view it’s properties? I’m wondering whether there’s a (relatively simple) way to do this on Illustrator: Thank you in advance for any help on this.
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