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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Fun With Illustrator Brushes (Best of clickpopmedia)

Fun With Illustrator Brushes

NUKE!


Step 0.5:
Open Illustrator


Step 1:
Using the Rectangle Tool (keyboard shortcut “m”) Create 1 black square and 1 white squarenext to each other (if you don’t know this yet, if you hold down shift while dragging out a rectangle, circle, etc. it will make a x by x square, circleor whatnot).
step1
Step 2:
Select the 2 squares and drag them into your brushes tab.

Step 2
Step 3:
When the New Brush menu pops up, make sure New Pattern Brush is selected and pressOK.

Step 3
Step 4:
In the Pattern Brush Options, give your brush a name, leave the other settings alone, and hitOK.

Step 4
Step 5:
Use the Ellipse Tool (keyboard shortcut L) to make a circle. Apply your new brush as the stroke.

Step 5
Step 6:
If you’re lucky, you’ll end up with the correct symbol. Odds are you won’t though, so adjust the stroke weight until you’re shape is just right.

Step 6
Step 7:
Don’t worry, we’re almost done. Select your circle and go to Object>Expand Appearance. That will make your stroke into individual shapes that you can scale, color, and otherwise edit as you wish.

Step 7
Step 8:
Now Delete the three white border pieces. This will leave you with two extra circles. Set one circles fill to black and shrink it down to the center. Give the other circle a black stroke and enlarge it.

Step 8
By changing the stroke width before you expand the appearance, you can make some other neat shapes. Mess around with it and have some fun.
Examples

Friday, July 9, 2010

Illustrator Tutorial: Designing a Sleek Pencil Icon (best of designblurb.com)


Illustrator Tutorial: Designing a Sleek Pencil Icon


Even though I consider myself a newby with Adobe Illustrator, I’ve been learning it for a few months now, and I find it very intriguing! I was inspired to design this kooky little pencil, that some would say works for icon design. So I thought I would write a tutorial on how to achieve the design of this sleek pencil using Adobe Illustrator CS3.
Illustrator Tutorial: Learn how to Design this Pencil Icon
Note: Since Illustrator changes very little over the versions, it shouldn’t matter too much if you’re using an older version.
Step 1
First thing’s first, set up your canvas. Just go to File > New, and use whatever settings you like. I’ve never been a big fan of using custom sizes and all that in Illustrator, unless designing a business card or something like that, so just change the color mode to RGB and leave the rest.
Enable the grid (View > Show Grid) and Snap to Grid (View > Snap to Grid).
Step 2
Let’s create the base of our shape. Using the Rectangle Tool (M), draw out a rectangle on your canvas, keeping it aligned with the grid. Looking at the subdivisions of your grid, make sure that the base of our pencil is an even number of boxes tall, umm, see the screenshot:
Creating Base Shape of Pencil
Width isn’t important at this time. You can easily change it later if it looks out of whack with the rest of the pencil.
Step 3
Now we should make the rest of the separate shapes. You’ll need to use various different tools for this one, such as: the Pen Tool and the Rounded Rectangle Tool. See the below screenshot to get the idea of it.
Creating the Rest of the Pencil Shapes
So, using the Pen Tool, you should create the pointed end(s). Start by creating the wood part of it, then afterward create the sharper point (the lead).
Detailed Layers Screenshot
Step 4
Now let’s give the pencil some life! Start with coloring each shape the color you would like it to have.
Separate Pencil Colors
Now, using these colors as a guide, add gradients to each of your shapes (some might not require it, though).
Gradients Applied to Separate Shapes
Now, as you can see we’ve added gradients to each of the shapes. All of these are simple two-color gradients except for one, the metal piece next to the eraser. All of the colors used in this gradient were: #f2f2f2,#b3b3b3#ffffff and #e6e6e6.
Metal Gradient Settings
You should understand that it isn’t important that you comply exactly with what you see above, the shiny metal effect is very random, so you should just add a few extra points, change the colors of them, etc.
Get creative, be messy with the settings.
Step 5
Let’s finish off by adding a nice little highlight effect to the top of our pencil. Start by getting out the Pen Tool, then draw a simple two-point path along the top like this:
Simple Pen Tool Path
When you’re done with the path, add a fairly-thick rounded-corner stroke to it, using whatever color you like. In the “Transparency” tab (Window > Transparency), change the mode to Screen and lower the opacity to around 50%.
Layer Mode and Opacity for Stroke Layer
Hopefully by now you have something like this:
Finalized Pencil Design
Hopefully!
Completion
Final Result Image
OK, looks like we’re pretty much done! My apologies if the tutorial was a little lean on instructions, but this was my first Illustrator tutorial! If you have any questions at all, please leave a comment or contact me!

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