

From that point, you wont be able to make. Now you can select all your Rectangle Shapes and edit their corners in the Transform panel. Applying a rounded corner to a shape created with any of Affinitys shape tools will convert that shape to curves. If this happens, you will have to go through the points and line them up first. Note that if the path is even slightly not rectangular, it will create a "Polygon Shape", which won't work. This will create a Rectangle Shape of exactly the same size. Go to the menu Object > Shape > Convert to Shape

Select the rectangles you want to convert. To transform your mask you can select all points on the mask, press Ctrl/Cmnd + t, then hold down the Ctrl/Cmnd key to resize around the geometric center of the mask. If you expand 50 pixels you get a 50 pixel radius on the corners of your mask. To convert a rectangular path into a Rectangle Shape: Mask expansion will round the corners of a mask. Illustrator won't recognise it as a "Rectangle Shape" object. I can scale anything (not proportionally) with the click on a corner but, unlike in Indesign or Illustrator, Shift + click just does not work It kind of releases the frame, just like if I had clicked outside of it. if you load a file from an SVG perhaps) will give you a path that happens to be rectangular. Once process completed, preview of round corner image is displayed along with download button. Drop image in tool, set the corner radius using slider, then click Round corner button to process the image. What if you don't see the Rectangle Properties?ĭrawing a rectangle with the Rectangle tool creates a "Rectangle Shape" object.Īny other way of creating a rectangle (e.g. Free online tool to make round corner image in a simple steps. Illustrator allows you to edit corners precisely in the Transform panel only when the object is a "Rectangle Shape", which therefore has "Rectangle Properties", which include corner radius.

In case anyone comes across this question in 2021 and is tearing their hair out, here is an updated solution.
