![]() You must have defined high enough raster effect resolution in your document properties to prevent visible pixelation NOTE1: Color halftone is a raster effect, the resulted dot pattern is essentially a bitmap image, only wrapped in Illustrator's effect machinery to keep the effect editable. Option invert reverses the effect, it makes flag parts under black to stay visible: Place the result onto one of the flags and define it to be an Opacity mask. Use coarse enough max dot size, I used 30px (see NOTE1): Let all RGB channels have the same angle, here it's 45 degrees. Insert to the gradient effect Pixelate > Color Halftone. (sorry for the vertical black line, it's my artboard edge) Make a rectangle of the same size and insert a black-white gradient over the wanted transition zone: ![]() ![]() Let's assume you have two flag images, the yellow one and the blue. In Illustrator you can use opacity masks instead of layer masks. Actually the idea is already shown by member Billy Kerr.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |