Click once (anywhere on the comp) to add a "path" attribute on that Shape Layer. 3. Go to your layer with the mask that you want to copy. 4. Drill down into the mask to reveal the Mask Path (it's the attribute with the stopwatch). 5. Copy the Mask Path directly 6. Go bac...
Then, there are odds and ends to remove, as well as wiring issues to address. The two most useful tools you'll need for the demo process are a power drill and an angle grinder. For hand tools, you should have a standard and a metric set of socket wrenches, a combination wrench set...
You then spin down the shape layer's Contents, drill down to Shape>Path, then select the path and paste. Your mask is now a Shape Path. When copying and pasting shapes I always find it easiest to set a keyframe for the mask path, select the keyframe, copy that, then go t...
Click once (anywhere on the comp) to add a "path" attribute on that Shape Layer. 3. Go to your layer with the mask that you want to copy. 4. Drill down into the mask to reveal the Mask Path (it's the attribute with the stopwatch). 5. Copy the Mask Path directly 6. Go back...
Click once (anywhere on the comp) to add a "path" attribute on that Shape Layer. 3. Go to your layer with the mask that you want to copy. 4. Drill down into the mask to reveal the Mask Path (it's the attribute with the stopwatch). 5. Copy the Mask Path directly 6. ...
You then spin down the shape layer's Contents, drill down to Shape>Path, then select the path and paste. Your mask is now a Shape Path. When copying and pasting shapes I always find it easiest to set a keyframe for the mask path, select the keyframe, copy that, then go t...
You then spin down the shape layer's Contents, drill down to Shape>Path, then select the path and paste. Your mask is now a Shape Path. When copying and pasting shapes I always find it easiest to set a keyframe for the mask path, select the keyframe, copy that, then go to...
You then spin down the shape layer's Contents, drill down to Shape>Path, then select the path and paste. Your mask is now a Shape Path. When copying and pasting shapes I always find it easiest to set a keyframe for the mask path, select the keyframe, copy that, then go to...
You then spin down the shape layer's Contents, drill down to Shape>Path, then select the path and paste. Your mask is now a Shape Path. When copying and pasting shapes I always find it easiest to set a keyframe for the mask path, select the keyframe, copy that, then go to...
You then spin down the shape layer's Contents, drill down to Shape>Path, then select the path and paste. Your mask is now a Shape Path. When copying and pasting shapes I always find it easiest to set a keyframe for the mask path, select the keyframe, copy that, then go t...