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Odierno310

: Making multiple / nested clipping masks in Adobe Illustrator I'm trying to turn this: into this: Put into words, I want the map to be the clipping mask of the lines. And then, I want

@Odierno310

Posted in: #AdobeIllustrator #ClippingMask #Technique

I'm trying to turn this:



into this:



Put into words, I want the map to be the clipping mask of the lines. And then, I want the circle to be the clipping mask of that other clipping mask. I want to mask a mask. Note the blue outline map is a map duplicate in another layer, since clipping masks cannot clip something and at the same time have a stroke applied.

Illustrator doesn't allow multiple clipping masks as far as I know. So what I'm doing right now is:


Ungroup every shape in the map, then select them all and turn them into a compound shape.
Paste the lines on top of the map, select both, right click -> make clipping mask.
Export both a "with lines" and a "without lines" versions, mask in Photoshop.


Is there any way to do this directly in Adobe Illustrator?

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@Alves566

As it turns out, it looks like it was an Illustrator bug. Just tried creating a new document and recreate what I was trying to do and now it gives me the option to create a mask inside a mask where before it would only let me "group" and "ungroup".

If you encounter this problem, try recreating what you're after in a new document.

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@Samaraweera207

First things first: A clipping mask CAN in fact have a stroke. Just apply the clipping mask, direct select the mask path and then apply the stroke. It can have a fill too if you like. Also, you can achieve multiple clipping masks by having a mask inside a mask inside a mask... Not best practice, but doable.

Secondly, you may be overcomplicating this. There is no need for the map to act as a clipping mask, it can just have a white fill. If you do it that way then you just need a circle with the lines clipped inside it behind the map and then one with the key line in front of the map. Simple, tidy and nice and flexible if you need to move the circle or add more circles.

I'd also suggest setting up your stripes as a pattern swatch to make things even easier.

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