Create a Flat-bottomed Stroke

Our guru of strokes reveals another trick: How to create a stroke that has rounded endpoints on its top half only.

In a forum post a few months ago, one of our readers wanted to create a stroke  with just the bottom half of the stroke rounded. In the original forum post, I shared how to do this with a simple gradient.

Stroke with only two corners rounded

Note that the result, as shown above, works great against a white background.  In an upcoming article, I’ll share an alternate solution that will produce a stroke with a transparent (not Paper-colored) bottom half, which is better if the stroke is going to be above an image.

I’d like to explain in more detail how I made this. I’m displaying the stroke on a colored background, so you can more easily see both halves of the stroke.

1. Make a thick stroke with rounded caps, and apply a gradient.

2. Change the rotation angle to 90 degrees.

3. Add two stops to the gradient.

Make the two left color stops white and the two right color stops blue. Changing colors of gradient stops can be a pain; I find the easiest way is to have both the color panel and the gradient panel side by side. After you’ve clicked on a gradient stop in the gradient panel, go to the color panel and adjust its values. Alternatively, you can drag swatches directly onto the gradient stops. For more tricks on using the gradient panel, check out this great article on using the gradient panel.

4. Move the second stop.

You can tell which stop is selected because the little triangle on top of the colored square will be black. (You can only select one stop at a time.) In the Location field, type 50%.

5. Move the Third Stop.

Now select the third stop and also set the location to 50%. Notice how blue two stop sits on top of the white stop. This creates a clean break in the color.

5. Reverse the Gradient if you like.

If you want the colors reversed, you can either reverse the gradient using the Reverse button (see below), or change the rotation angle to -90 degrees. Your choice.

You can see how this would work well with over a solid-colored background. But this technique could be problematic over a photographic background. In my next article, I’ll explain how to make a stroke with a completely invisible bottom half.

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This article was last modified on December 30, 2021

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