Your first impulse may be to paste the graphic as paths.
Choose from the three radio buttons there to select your pasting preference: pixels, paths, or shape layer.įigure 17-3: Pasting Illustrator data into Photoshop. Whenever you copy and paste a graphic from Illustrator into Photoshop, the Paste dialog box appears, as shown in Figure 17-3. Rasterize is a two-dollar word for the process that converts vector-based data into pixel-based data.
After you drag a graphic from Illustrator to Photoshop, the graphic rasterizes automatically. In Photoshop, you need to use the Move tool.Īfter you move graphics this way, they appear at the height and width that they were when created in the other program. In Illustrator, you can use any selection tool to do the dragging. Or simply click a selection in either program and drag the selection from that one application into an open window in the other application. Make a selection in either program, choose Copy from the Edit menu, and then go to the other application and choose Paste from the Edit menu. Open a file in Photoshop, and then open a file in Illustrator. The copy and paste and drag and drop methods of getting a file from one program to the other are incredibly easy. Making life easy: Copy and paste, drag and drop Saving a file in an earlier version enables the application to “understand” the file. Close the file and open it again before you try to copy and paste. If you ever bring something from Illustrator into Photoshop (or vice versa) and something weird happens (parts of the image are missing, odd lines streak through the image, nothing happens, or your computer crashes), try saving the file as an earlier version, such as Illustrator 8 or Illustrator 6. (Well, okay, just the desires that center on moving files between graphics applications. Each method produces slightly different results to meet your every need, whim, or desire. You can take files from either application and put them directly into the other application in five ways: dragging and dropping copying and pasting (almost identical to cutting and pasting) placing exporting and importing or opening. Illustrator and Photoshop, both from Adobe, provide unique and useful integration capabilities.