Is there any way to get the SVG path string off a Photoshop custom shape or path? Or is there another way to get/construct similar data? I\'m looking to do something similar to
Another option is to save the file as EPS in photoshop making sure to have export vectors checked, and then loading that into illustrator and saving as SVG
Update: in recent versions of Photoshop, there is a built-in option to export the image as SVG, which works well on paths and custom shapes. Just do:
File -> Export -> Export as... and select SVG in the file settings.
Original Answer:
Starting from Photoshop CC 14.2, you can create SVG files directly from Photoshop:
generator.json
with the content below in your user home folder.<something>.svg
.Content for generator.json:
{
"generator-assets": {
"svg-enabled": true
}
}
Source: http://creativedroplets.com/generate-svg-with-photoshop-cc-beta/
All answers were good, but for me they were too much, there is an online tool provided by Adobe:
http://adobe.com/go/extract_tryitnow_en
All you have to do is upload /drag & drop/ your .psd file, choose the path layer and download as svg. And you can extract the svg path, d
attribute in particular.
Then what I did is put the path
into a g
element, then scaled g
and translated the path
For custom shapes, you may want to have a look at the recently released open-source script called Convert Custom Shapes File to SVG Set (for Photoshop CS3 or later), used to convert a custom shapes file (.csh) or a custom shapes preferences file (CustomShapes.psp) into a set of SVG files.
If you have Illustrator and have not created all the paths, however, it is probably easier to create them directly in Illustrator.
If you do not have Illustrator, you are probably better off using the free Inkscape SVG editor to draw your paths.
If you do already have the paths in Photoshop, and do not have Illustrator, the best I can think of is to turn on the Info palette in Photoshop select the path points one at a time and manually record the positions of the point itself as well as its handles, and from those manually create the path using absolute curveto commands, 'C' (for the points with handles) and absolute lineto commands, 'L' for those points that have no handles.