Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
What happens is…As you assign an element a 50% transparency. You can still see that when you select it again if is not grouped BUT, where it changes, (where it says it’s 100%) Is after you have grouped it with somthing else. That “group” is then 100% opacity unless you change that whole group. So, even if you select that with the open arrow tool, it’s showing the transparency (as a group). That still prints out as the transparency even if it’s grouped. It just says what opacity the group is. You can have many different elements with various transparency within, but once grouped, all will show that group as 100%.Pierre is also correct.
That gray means thats where you made the changes!Pierre
Yes, and no Dan, but no time to explain right now. I did discover that if I chose the object in question, with the Direct Selection Tool (the hollow or white arrow) and used "select same appearance" that it selected all the pieces with the same percentage, and that they were grouped. Ungrouping them made them all revert to 100%. Not perfect, but it allows you to reassign new percentages.Steve
Quote from: Sbrem on November 16, 2021, 03:50:11 PMYes, and no Dan, but no time to explain right now. I did discover that if I chose the object in question, with the Direct Selection Tool (the hollow or white arrow) and used "select same appearance" that it selected all the pieces with the same percentage, and that they were grouped. Ungrouping them made them all revert to 100%. Not perfect, but it allows you to reassign new percentages.SteveMagic wand tool should work even better in that case.May I ask what version of Illustrator you are using. I`m trying to replicate your problems here but I absolutely fail.
Oh yes! I feel you are onto something there. So, you create your percentages by taking the opacity down (in the color) window.I almost exclusively use the transparency feature now myself. In creating and separations. Especially in separations. I did a example of the differences in the tutorials section last year I think.The two treat the output vary differently. When reducing the opacity in the color window, (let’s say to 70%), It’s using computer white or default white to do that. The 30% is white. This is why it seems more washed out than just reducing transparency. But the more important part is that (using the color opacity) that percentage of white…gets knocked out. Computer white, doesn’t print. It’s not a color. So it can’t be assigned to overprint the white parts. For this reason, those elements must be put below other elements that need to print over top of it.transparency looks and works better. The math for that does not use computer white. Also, you can tell that to multiply and get a better visual of how that may turn out.So that’s the uniqueness between the two. How that plays a role in your issue, I’m not sure yet. But I’ll keep it in mind as I’m going. It’s just that since they are vary different, this may be a factor with your issues.