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Adobe InDesign: Creating New Stroke Styles

by Barb Binder, Adobe Certified Instructor on InDesign
Updated:  May 24, 2020

Note: If you are new to the Stroke Panel, take a moment to review the basic concepts covered in Adobe InDesign: Stroke Primer before moving on to this tutorial.

A very useful, yet little known, option in the Stroke panel is the ability to add your own custom styles to the Stroke Type list. It’s a pretty easy process and we are going to start by adding one style that is conspicuously missing from the default list: a stroke with rounded end caps. Here’s how:

  1. Open the Stroke panel (Window > Stroke)
  2. Click the Stroke panel menu and choose Stroke Styles.
    Adobe InDesign: Add new stroke styles
  3. Click the New button to add a new style.
    Adobe InDesign: Stroke Options
  4. Let’s call it “Rounded End Cap” and then set the stroke length to match the pattern length (in my example, it’s 2p0) and chose the rounded end Cap, before clicking both Add and Done, OK.
    Adobe InDesign: New Stroke Style dialog box
  5. Pull down the Stroke Type menu in the Stroke panel or the Control panel, and there’s your new stroke. It may not seem very exciting yet, but this new stoke is going to play pivotal role in both our custom underline and custom paragraph rules tutorial.
    Adobe InDesign: New styles show up at the bottom of the menu

Before we wrap up, let’s add a few more stroke styles, just for fun. These last six styles are InDesign “Easter Eggs”. (Easter Eggs are undocumented features added to software programs by mischievous programmers.) While these may not be particularly practical, they are certain to put a smile on your face.

  1. Open the Stroke panel (Window > Stroke)
  2. Click the Stroke panel menu and choose Stroke Styles.
  3. Click the New button to add a new style.
  4. These first four require that you set the Type to Dash, and then type in the following four Stroke names, clicking the Add button after each one: Feet, Happy, Lights and Woof.
    Adobe InDesign: Easter Egg Strokes
  5. Click Done to see the new Stroke styles:
    Adobe InDesign: Four new strokes
  6. Add two new additional styles by clicking on the New button again. These last two must be based on the Stripe style. Call one Rasta, and the other one Rainbow, clicking the Add button after each one.
    Adobe InDesign: Base the last two on stripes
  7. Click the Done button to see the new styles:
    Adobe InDesign: Rasta and Rainbow
  8. Now, go play!
    Adobe InDesign: Easter Egg strokes, in action

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12 thoughts on “Adobe InDesign: Creating New Stroke Styles

  1. Hi… The “Rounded End Cap” is good example of a custom strokes styles. Just want to add that to be able to used it without introducing un-colored gaps, we need to set the Corners options to “adjust dash” only.

    1. Dave:

      You can a make a line that looks like a hand-drawn sketch in Adobe Illustrator, and then place the line into your InDesign document.

      ~Barb

  2. Hi – This is a very helpful tutorial. I need to create a chalk-style stroke – could you perhaps explain such, or even offer tutorial on this procedure? Thank you!

    1. Hi Ernesto:

      You can’t make a stroke style a bunch of little arrows in InDesign. You can make the graphic elsewhere (i.e., in Photoshop or Illustrator) and anchor it to the paragraph for the same look.

      ~Barb