Transcripts
1. Introduction : Hi, everyone. My
name is Geetanjali, I'm an artist, illustrator, surface pattern designer, and Thangka painter
based in Goa, India. Welcome to my class. If you're new here, I would
like to tell that this is the second class in the series of 'how to take a creative
approach to patterns'. In this class, we will go
through everything you need to know in order to get started
with Adobe Illustrator CC. There are various classes about
Adobe Illustrator basics. Initially, I wanted to create a class just to share
my own workflow. But then I realized, even
to share my workflow, it's better if I first share my approach to the program
and how I see the tools. Because there are
so many ways of doing a certain thing
in Illustrator. Also, my approach towards pattern design has changed a
lot in the last few years. With the new updates from Adobe, Illustrator has become much more than a vector artwork
design program. I use Illustrator for every
single pattern I create. And I also keep combining Illustrator
with other programs like Adobe Photoshop and Procreate
to get the desired results. This class is designed for people who are completely new to Illustrator or if you need
a refresher in the basics. Though this class includes general information on all
the tools and features, I have given special
emphasis on what is more helpful in the
pattern design process. So without any further ado, let's get started with
our first lesson.
2. Class Overview and Project: Hi everyone. Before we begin, let's have a quick
look at what you can expect from this class. We will start with the
introduction to Illustrator. Then learn about creating a new document and the
workspace overview. Then we will understand
the vector shapes and free transform, document overview. Next we will discuss the
fill and stroke color. How to transform, arrange, align, and distribute
multiple objects. About group, lock, hide, and isolation mode. Then we'll start with
the selection tools. Essential drawing tools like
pen and curvature tool. Freeform drawing tools
like pencil, brush, and blob brush tool,
shape builder tool and path finder, then type tool. Next we will learn
about the eraser, knife, and scissor tool. Then we'll discuss
the eyedropper, gradient, and mesh tool, the swatches panel, some smart
drawing tools like width, blend, and repeat tool. We will also learn what is
expand and expand appearance, compound path and clipping mask, different ways of working with raster files in Illustrator. Finally how to save export
and export files for screens. I have also included a small visual demonstration that will help you with
the class project. Your project for this
class is to learn Illustrator tools and
practice them regularly. You can use the practice sheets provided in the resources. Once you're comfortable
using the tools, design a vector artwork using
your own hand-drawn sketch, or you can use the
reference I have uploaded. Your project artwork
should include at least one or more effects
and attributes like brush, stroke style, blend,
gradients or clipping mask. Once ready, feel free to share your artwork in the
student's project gallery. I have included various
practice sheets, list of keyboard shortcuts, and some templates which will help you follow
along the lessons. You can download them from
the resources gallery. I'm really excited to
see what you create. Let's get started with
our first lesson.
3. Introduction to Adobe illustrator: Today we have various design
programs available that can be used to create and
edit digital artwork. Adobe Illustrator is one of the most popular graphic
design application that is used to create
vector graphics, illustrations, posters,
patterns, logos, and much more. Its native file format is AI, that stands for
Adobe Illustrator, and some of the
other most common file formats are: PDF, EPS, and SVG. The vector images and
graphics created using Illustrator are made
up of points, lines, shapes, and curves based
on mathematical formulas, rather than a set
amount of pixels. You can create very simple to complex artworks in Illustrator, and since it's vector-based, the artwork can be scaled to any size without losing quality. But in my opinion, Illustrator is a
complete package where not only you can create
high-quality graphics, but also use some of it's
amazing editing features and combine with other
programs to make your design process a
lot more efficient. Illustrator provides various
drawing and editing tools using which you can create
artwork with different styles. Here are some of my
favorite styles. Creating a flat
color artwork using just solid blocks of
color to define shapes. Creating a more loose
and hand-drawn style using the free form drawing
and painting tools. Using gradient to add more
dimension to the artwork, adding multiple textures and blending modes to
add more depth. Creating precise and
complex geometric patterns using repeat tool features. Creating unique artwork using
editable custom brushes. Using Live Trace
feature to convert your hand-drawn or hand painted artwork into
a vectorized style. Playing around with the
type tool to create beautiful typography
art, and finally, adding some cool 3D effects
like inflate, emboss, drop shadow, and more which results in a
three-dimensional artwork. Once you learn the
fundamentals of this program, you can play around
and figure out which styles you would
like to explore more, or you can even come up with something completely new
and even more interesting. The possibilities
are just endless, so without any further ado, let's get started with
our first lesson.
4. Creating a New Document : I'm working on the
Illustrator latest version. But most of the things
you will find same if you are using the Adobe
Illustrator CC version. You can also download the trial version from
the link in resources. Once you open Illustrator, click on this "Home" icon and you will see
the home screen. Right now, it's on my homepage where I can see my recent files. On the left, you have
file settings where you can create a new file or
open an existing file. When you click on "Learn", you get to watch the
tutorial videos by Adobe. Next option is Files. These settings are for
Adobe Cloud users, where you can save and
share your files online. Coming back to Homepage. To create a new document, either click on "New". You can also go
to File and click "New" or press Control or
Command N on your keyboard. This will lead to the
New Document window. Here you can see the different
file presets available. Illustrator offers a
number of file presets and templates to choose from
depending on your project. On the right, you can
customize these settings. Let's see the preset details. You can start by giving
the document a name. I'll name it as
illustrator basics. Select the measuring unit
from this dropdown menu, and enter the required width
and height for the document. For surface pattern design, people normally use
inch or pixels. Let's keep it 10 by
10 inch for now. Next we can choose
the orientation from here as portrait
or landscape. Here you can choose the
number of artboards. Illustrator allows you to work on multiple artboards within the same document and they can all be of different
sizes and dimensions. For now, I'll keep it as one since we can edit
this later as well. Bleed is taken into consideration when you want to get
your artwork printed. As the printer sometimes might shift a little while printing or cutting and that will result in getting a white
line on the edge. To avoid that, we normally
put the artwork in such a way that it extends the art board by
a little bit to bleed. Most printers will tell
you how much bleed they need and you can
design accordingly. When you are designing
artwork for surface pattern, it is designed as a
time that repeats endlessly and the print size always depends on
the end product. so Here the bleed will be zero. Now let's move on with
the advanced options. Here you get to select
the color mode, which you can keep as CMYK or RGB depending on your project. For now, I'll keep it as RGB. Resolution or the Raster Effects is taken
into consideration. When you are using a raster
image in your document. Or you want to upload or export your file for web or print. For web use, like uploading on a website or online portfolio, you can keep it at
a minimum 72 dpi. For print purpose, go for 150 dpi or higher. Let's keep the preview
mode as default for now, we will discuss this
in upcoming lesson. One thing to note about Illustrator is that
all these settings are editable even after creating the document. Now
click "Create". Let's see where we
can find and edit all these settings in
an existing document. To change the file name. Go to File, Save As, or Save a copy, you can enter the new name here. To change the document
size and unit, go to File, select Documents Setup, and you can change the
units and bleed value here. To edit the artboard size. Click on the "Edit Artboard". and Now in the Properties panel, you can edit the width
and height here. Click on this icon to
lock the proportions. You can also simply drag the corners to
resize the artboard. You can change the
artboard name here. To add more artboard, click on this "Plus" icon. To delete an art board, click on this "Delete" icon
with the artboard selected. Click here to change
the orientation. Click on the
"Rearrange All" button to arrange the artboards. Click "Exit" to return. Now to change the
document color mode, go to file document color mode, and choose CMYK or RGB. To change the resolution,
go to Effects, choose document raster
effects settings and here you can change it. Click on this "Home"
icon to go back to the home screen and this small arrow to go
back to your document. Finally, to close
and open document, click on this small "x" or
go to file and select Close. In the next lesson, we will
discuss about the workspace
5. Workspace Overview: You can create and manipulate your document and files
using various elements, such as panels,
bars, and windows. Any arrangement of these
elements is called a workspace. The workspace in
illustrator can be separated in various parts, and knowing them will help
you make the most of it. Everything you see
on screen right now can be customized
and moved around. On the very top, we
have the header. Here you will find all the menu. There are multiple ways of doing a certain actions
in Illustrator, and most of them you
can find in the menu. On the right, we have the application header with options like share documents, where you can now
quickly invite people to your document when you have
it saved as a Cloud document. Here and you can search and discover new tips and tutorials. Next is the arrange
document icon. Click this icon to arrange all your open documents in
grids and tile formats. For example, I'll open
another new document, keep the settings as
default for this. Now we have two documents open. With arrange document,
I can choose the display of these two
documents on my screen. With the two up option, I can work on the two
documents side-by-side. Similarly, when you have
multiple documents open, you can choose the
display option from here. Let's close this file
by clicking on this X. Next we have switch
workspace icon. Click this icon to view
different workspace options. Illustrator provides
different workspace presets for different work flows
based on your project. You can even customize and
save your own workspace. For now, let's select
essentials classic preset, just so we are both
on the same page. Below that we have
the control bar. It is one of the most helpful
elements of the workspace, and its content will
change depending on the object or tool
you have selected. Next, we have the document tab. You can arrange multiple
document tab layouts from here and work on
them simultaneously. On the left side, we
have the toolbar, which contains all the
tools in Illustrator. If you hover the
mouse over a tool, Illustrator will show
you the tools name, it's keyboard shortcut, and a small video explaining
what the tool does. If you see a small arrow
on the corner of the tool, you can click and hold to
open up similar tools. For example, clicking and holding on the
rectangle tool opens up a menu containing similar
tools like rounded rectangle, ellipse, polygon, and more. Click on the Edit toolbar icon, which is the three dots at the bottom to view the
complete list of tools. Tools in Illustrator
are divided into six categories based
on their application. Select, Draw, Type, Paint, Modify, and Navigate. On the right side,
we have panels. Illustrator has several
different panels, and they are all used to perform different actions
like color, gradient, swatches, brushes and more. They can all be opened through
the window menu. Panels can be expanded or collapsed using the arrow
symbol on the top right corner, and arrow symbol
within each panel. You can add, remove, or move panel as per
your preference. To remove a panel, right-click on its
tab and select close. To add a panel select it from the window menu and dock
it wherever you want. To move a panel,
drag it by its tab. To move a panel group, drag the title bar. To Stack floating panels, drag a panel by its tab to the drop zone at the
bottom of another panel. To change the stacking order, drag a panel up or
down by its tab. Next we have is the
properties panel, which lets you view
settings and controls in the context of your
current task or workflow. It's quite similar
to the control bar. When nothing is selected, the properties panel display
the art board settings. The properties panel
is available by default in the
essentials workspace. You can also select Windows, choose Properties to view it. At the bottom of the workspace, we have the status bar, it shows the zoom level, selected art board,
and selected tool. and Finally in the center of
all, is the art board, the white rectangle, is
the size of art board that we have selected while
creating the document. We can also customize the
user interface setting. To do that, go to Illustrator
in Mac or edit in Windows. Now select Preferences and
choose User Interface. You can choose one of the
following color options, dark, medium dark, medium light, or light. You can also choose
the canvas color to either match brightness, which will set the
color of the canvas to selected brightness level
or you can choose white. To adjust the tool icon
size, click and drag here. Now once you have
customized the workspace, to save it, go to Window. Now choose Workspace and
select New Workspace, enter a name and click OK. The names of the saved
workspaces appear in the workspace switcher
in the application bar. You can use this workspace
for any document. In the next lesson,
we will understand the basic vector shapes
and how to transform them
6. Vector Shapes and Free Transform: Before we begin, I would like to change our toolbar
setting to basic. To do that, go to Window menu, choose toolbars, and now select Basic instead
of Advanced. You will notice we have a
much simpler toolbar now. This is enough to get
familiar with the tools in Illustrator and
create any artwork. Once you get an understanding
of these basic tools, you can change it back to advance and explored
the other tools. You can even customize
your own toolbar. Now before we get
into the tools, it's important to
understand vector shapes. All the vector shapes are made up of paths and anchor points. Now what is a path? As you draw, you create a line called a path. A path is made up of one or more straight
or curved segments. It could be an open path, which is a connected series
of line segments where the start and end points are
not joined with each other, or it could be a closed
path where the start and end points are joined
together to form a shape. Now what is an anchor point? Anchor points mark the end
points of the path segments. On curve segment, each anchor point displays one or two direction lines
ending in direction points. The positions of direction
lines and points determines the shape
of the curved segment. Moving these elements
reshapes the curve in a path. Smooth curves are connected by anchor points called
smooth points. Sharply curved paths are
connected by corner points. When you move a direction
line on a smooth point, the curved segment
on both sides of the point at adjusted
simultaneously, but when you move a direction
lines on a corner point, only the curve on
the same side of the point as the direction
line is adjusted. Uniform or simple
shapes will have the minimum number
of anchor points that is required to
create that shape. For example, a straight line will have two anchor points, a triangle will have three, a rectangle will have four, a circle will have
four, and so on. To add more movement
or curve to the path, we need to add more
anchor points. To make the path visible, we can either use a fill color, stroke color, or both. Next we'll see how we can
transform a path or shape. We will understand this
using some simple shapes. Since we have a tool for that, let's begin with
the rectangle tool. You can find this in the
toolbar on the left and the keyboard shortcut
for rectangle tool is M. To select the tool, click on the Rectangle tool
or press M on your keyboard. Now to draw a rectangle, all you need to do is
click on the Artboard. A small window will appear, and here you can
enter the dimensions for the width and height
of the rectangle, and click OK. Another way is to hold and drag
to draw a rectangle. Holding Shift while dragging will make it a perfect square. To draw another shape, click and hold on the
Rectangle tool and now choose ellipse tool or
press L on your keyboard. Click to enter values or
drag to draw freehand. Holding Shift while dragging will make it a perfect circle. For polygon tool, you can choose the
number of sides by selecting the tool and
clicking on the Artboard. Enter the value here. If you just select the
tool and drag to draw, it will use the settings of
the last used polygon shape. To draw a straight line, select the Line
Segment tool from the list and just
click and drag. Holding Shift will constrain the movement by a
multiple of 45-degree. Now we have few shapes
on our artboard. Let's understand the
free transformation using these shapes. For that we will
use another tool, which is the selection tool, and it is also one of the most
used tool in Illustrator. You can find this tool in the
toolbar as the black arrow. The keyboard shortcut
for selection tool is V. This tool is used to
select entire object. With this tool, you can hold and drag the object to move around. Click on an object to
select the entire object. Hold Shift and click on multiple objects to
add to selection. Clicking once will select the object and clicking
again will deselect it. When you click on an object a bounding box
appears around it, which helps to
transform the object. Now when you hover the
cursor around the corner, you will notice a small
two-sided arrow switching between a straight diagonal
and rounded shape. When it is diagonal,
you can click and drag the bounding box to
scale the object. Holding Shift while dragging will keep the
proportions locked. Remember when the
object has no fill, you can also select
it by clicking inside as the area is empty. Either click on the stroke, or click and drag over the
outline to select the object. Now when it is rounded, you can hold and
rotate the object in clockwise or
anticlockwise direction. Holding Shift while
rotating will constrain the rotation by
a multiple of 45 degree. You can also stretch
or flip the object by holding and dragging the
sides of the bounding box. To make a copy of the object, just select the
object and now hold Alt on PC or Option key
on Mac, and drag it. Release the mouse before
releasing the Alt or Option key. You can also go to edit copy and then choose an
option from paste in front, back, in place or based
on all artboards. To delete an object, select the object and press
Delete on your keyboard, or you can go to Edit
and choose cut or clear. Another amazing feature
here is the live corners. You can select one or more
corner points in your artwork. When selected, a
live corner widget appears next to
each corner point. Dragging the widget causes the corner points to
change shape into one of the three available
corner types that are round, inverted
round and chamfer. To use the light corner widget, select the shape and
drag the live corners. When you hold Alt
on PC or Option key on Mac and click
on the live corners, it shuffles between
the three options. We can also use this to individual or selective
anchor points using another most commonly
used tool called direct selection tool
or the white arrow. You can find this
in the toolbar, and the keyboard shortcut
for this tool is A. With the direct selection tool, click on an anchor point to select only that anchor point. Hold Shift and click on another anchor point
to add to selection. Now, edit the live corner
widgets accordingly. Keep in mind, live corner only works on
the corner points. Use this reference image to practice the life
Corner Widget features. In the next lesson,
we will discuss some of the basic
document properties
7. Document Overview: Now that we have understood our workspace and
basic vector shapes, let's discuss a little about
the document overview, as it will be really
helpful while creating any artwork
in Illustrator. The first one is the
properties panel. Properties panel in Illustrator
lets you view settings and controls in the context of your current task or workflow. If you don't see it, go to Window menu and
select Properties. When no objects are selected in your documents and the
Selection tool is selected. The properties panel displays controls related
to the Artboard, ruler, grids, guides, snapping, and some
commonly used preferences. In this state, the
Properties panel displays quick action buttons that let you open
the document setup and enter the Artboard
editing mode. For any selection,
the properties panel displays two set of controls, transformation and appearance
controls like width, height, fill, stroke,
opacity, etc. Dynamic controls that are available depending on the
content of your selection. For example, you can
adjust the character and paragraph settings
of text objects. Next is the layer panel. You can find it in the panels or go to Window
and select Layers. Layers panel is used to list, organize, and edit the
objects in a document. By default, every new document
contains only one layer, and each object you create
is listed under that layer. However, you can
create new layers and rearrange items
as per your need. The Layers panel include
a visibility column that indicates whether items in a layer are visible or hidden. The edit column that indicates whether items are
locked or unlocked. The lock icon indicates that the item is locked
and cannot be edited. A blank space indicates that the item is unlocked
and can be edited. To change the layer name, Double-click on the
text and edit it. Next is the target column, which indicates
whether the items are targeted for application
of effects and attributes. When you click on this item, a double ring appears, which means the
layer is targeted. I can edit any attribute like opacity of the entire selection
in the appearance panel. Lastly, we have the
selection column that indicates a color box when one or more items
on that layer are selected and disappears
when nothing is selected. To create a new layer, click on the Plus
icon at the bottom. To delete a layer, select and drag the layer to
the Delete icon. There are a lot more actions
available when you click on the Layers panel menu on top
that you can explore later. But these are the most
common actions and will be helpful while
creating Artworks. Next, we have is the
Appearance panel. If you don't see it, go to Window menu and
select Appearance. Appearance panel is
used to view and adjust the appearance
attributes for an object, group, or layer. It is especially useful
when you have to modify an effect
applied on an object. For example, here I have a rectangle with drop shadow
effect applied to it. Now, if I want to adjust
the shadow settings, I can select the object and click on the
Appearance panel. Here I can adjust the settings. Now let's check the ruler
and smart guide settings. Illustrator provides
separate rulers for documents and Artboards. You can select only one of
these rulers at a time. The difference between
Artboard rulers and Global Rulers is that if you
select Artboard Rulers, the origin point changes based
on the Artboard selected. Whereas the default
origin point for Global Ruler is at the upper left corner
of the first Artboard. To show or hide Rulers, choose View, Rulers, and select from here. To set the general unit
of measurements for the current document or
change the Ruler type. Right-click on the ruler
bar and select from here. You can also edit it in
the properties panel. Smart guides are temporary
snap to guides that appear when you create or manipulate objects or Artboards. They help you align, edit, and transform
objects or Artboard relative to other objects,
Artboard or both. When you transform an object, smart guides
automatically appear to assist transformation. To turn Smart Guides on or off, go to View, select Smart
Guides and choose here. Next feature is the View mode. You can view your Artboard
in four different ways. Use the outline mode when
you are working on details. To do that, go to View and choose Outline from
the overhead menu. The keyboard shortcut for Outline mode is command or
control Y on your keyboard. It allows you to see whether the lines or objects
are intersecting. Repeat the same
keyboard shortcut, or click on Preview to
return to Preview in color. Next is the Overprint preview. The keyboard shortcut for this is Alt Shift Control plus Y, or Option Shift Command plus Y. Before sending your
artwork to print, you can preview how the colors, shadows, and other effects will look by choosing
Overprint Preview. Choose the pixel preview when you want to see how your design will look on a web browser
or once it's rasterized. The keyboard
shortcut for this is Alt Control Y or
Option Command Y. You can zoom in to see
individual pixels. Finally, choose the
Trim view option to view only the Artwork within the Artboard
in Illustrator. GPU is the shortcut for
graphics processing unit. It was designed to speed up the graphics rendering process. You can enable or disable GPU performance from the
Illustrator application menu. Go to Preferences choose
Performance and GPU Performance. With the latest version
of Illustrator, the GPU Performance is
enabled by default. If you see a lag in Illustrator performance
due to your GPU card, you can either disabled
GPU performance or change the preview
mode to preview with CPU in Illustrator. Now finally, some keyboard
shortcuts that we will use frequently while
working in Illustrator. Zoom in and zoom out. You can find the Zoom tool in the toolbar or press
Z on your keyboard. Click the area you want to
zoom into one or more times. Or drag to zoom in
within an area. To zoom out, Hold Alt on
PC or Option key on Mac, and click or drag over the area. In case you have zoomed
in or out too much, use Control or Command 0 on your keyboard to
fit to Artboard. The hand tool lets you
navigate through the canvas and Artboard in
an Illustrator document. Click the Hand tool
in the toolbar, or press H on your keyboard. Click and drag in any direction to move the Canvas around. You can also use
Space key and drag. But in this case, the hand tool disappears once you
release the space key. The Rotate view tool lets you change the Canvas
view at any angle. Click and hold the
Hand tool and select the Rotate View tool or press Shift plus H
on your keyboard. Now, drag to rotate the
canvas to desired angle. To undo an action, press Command or Control
Z on your keyboard. To redo an action Shift Command Z or Shift
Control Z on your keyboard. You can also go to Edit
and select undo or redo. To De-select a tool, click on Selection tool or any other
tool from the toolbar. In the next lesson,
we will learn about Fill and Stroke color.
8. Fill and Stroke Color: The Fill and Stroke tool lets
you add colors, patterns, or gradients inside an
object or on its outline. Controls for setting
the fill and stroke are available
in the tools panel, the control panel,
properties panel, and the swatches panel when
the object is selected. To specify a color
using the tools panel, double-click on the
Fill button and select a color using
the color picker. To select the color
for the stroke, double-click on
the Stroke button and select a color
using the color picker. Click on the small arrow to swap colors between the
fill and stroke. Click on this default button to return to default color setting, which is white fill
and black stroke. Click on this color
icon to apply the last selected solid color, on this gradient icon to change to last
selected gradient, or on the none icon to remove the selected objects,
fill or stroke. Remember the
selection applies to whichever icon is on top
out of the color or stroke. You can also specify
color and stroke for a selected object
by using the controls in the properties panel
and the control panel. Click to open color panel
or the swatches panel, and choose a color for the fill or stroke of
the selected object. We will learn more about
the swatches panel in the upcoming lesson. Let's understand the
stroke panel now. You can find this in
the control panel or open the stroke's panel. If you don't see it, go to
window and select Stroke. We will use an open path and a closed path to understand
the stroke properties. Now starting with
the stroke weight, use this up and down
arrows to adjust the stroke weight or choose a value from the drop-down menu or you can enter your own value. Next, you can choose
different cap in the case of an open path, which will decide
how a path ends. Corners are for joins or corner points in an
open or closed path. You can choose from milter join, round join, or bevel join. Next is the stroke alignment. This is basically how the stroke is aligned
to the vector path. This can make a huge difference when the stroke weight is more. You can choose from
align stroke to center, align stroke to inside, or align stroke to outside. We can also use dashed line to enhance the
stroke appearance. I use these a lot in my fashion technical drawings
to draw stitch lines, embroidery effects, rib
textures, and more. To create a dashed line, select this stroke and now
select the Dashed Line option. You can enter same or
different values in the dash and gap boxes and play around
to get the desired result. It can also give a strip effect if the
stroke weight is more, just like the rib texture
shown in the example. Another variation of
this is dotted lines. To create this effect,
change the stroke cap to rounded and keep
the dash value zero. Now adjust the gap relative to the stroke weight and this
will create a dotted line. Make sure to check the
two boxes on the right to see how you would like
the corners to look. Next option is arrowheads. Select the path and you
can choose arrowheads for one or both sides in the same or different designs
from the drop-down menu. You can also choose alignment of arrowheads tip from
these two options. Another very interesting
feature is the stroke profile. This is basically a
stylized shape for the stroke and you can select any profile from the given
set or create your own. Select one or more
strokes and choose the profile to apply it
to the selected strokes. Click on this icon
to flip the effect. One more option that you
see here is the brush. Now why it is include
it in the control panel is because brushes have the
properties of a stroke. All the drawing tools in
Illustrator will either have fill property
or stroke property. We'll discuss this in
detail with each tool. Another simple yet
important feature in strokes is in the Effect menu. You can choose a simple
stroke and go to effect, choose distort and transform,
and select Zigzag. Click here to adjust the
size and ridges per segment. You can also make it rounded. There are a lot
of other effects, but this could be really
helpful in some projects. As I mentioned earlier,
to edit the effects, go to Appearance panel
with the object selected, and you can edit
the settings here. In the next lesson, we will
learn how to transform, arrange, align, and
distribute multiple objects.
9. Transform, Arrange, Align and Distribute Objects: When you have
multiple objects on your art board,
you can transform, arrange, align, and
distribute them, and create beautiful
compositions. You can find these
tools in the toolbar, object menu on top, or when you right-click
on the object, and even in the properties panel when the object is selected. Let's start with the first
transform tool, move. Now, the simplest
way to do this, would be select the object using selection tool or press
V on your keyboard, and drag the object
around to move. But to move it by an exact distance like we
do it in repeat patterns, would be moving it vertically or horizontally by
a certain value. For example, I'll create
a rectangle here, which is one by one inch. If I want to move it by
one inch horizontally, what I need to do is
select the object, now, go to Object, choose
Transform, and Move. Now in the window, enter
the horizontal value as one inch and keep the
vertical value zero. To move the original copy, we can click "Okay" and if
we want to create a copy, we can click on Copy. You can also move your object by selecting an
angle and distance. Click on the Preview to
see change in real time. To repeat an action,
press Control or command D on your keyboard, which is the shortcut
for transform again. Now, this transform object
and pattern comes into picture when you have an
object filled with a pattern. For example, let's fill the rectangle with the pattern
from the swatches panel. Now, when I try to
move my selection, these options are enabled but I can choose whether I want
to move just the object, just the pattern fill, or both. With transform objects selected, you will notice the object when moved by an inch to the right, the pattern fill inside
looks different. This is because the
pattern fill inside is not moving and we see another
section of the repeat pattern. Now, let's try with the select
Transform Pattern option. In this case, the object
remains at its place, but the pattern inside
moves to the right. Finally, when both are selected, the objects move to the right
along with the pattern, so it looks exactly the same. Next transform tool is rotate. The simplest way to
rotate an object is by selecting the object and dragging the bounding box using the rounded arrow icon
clockwise or anticlockwise. Hold Shift to restrict the rotation by a
multiple of 45 degree. Another way is to
open the rotate tool. The keyboard shortcut for
rotate tool is R. Click once to select the tool and double-click to open
the tool settings. You can also use
the Object menu or right-click on the object
to open the tool setting. In the dialog box, enter
your desired value and chose to apply the changes to selected object or make a copy. You can also set the center
of rotation, for example, with this rectangle selected, click on the Rotate tool, and now drag and place the
center anywhere you wish. When you rotate
the rectangle now, it will use the
new center point. Holding Shift while
dragging will constrain the angle to a
multiple of 45 degree, and if you click
Alt or Option key before releasing the mouse,
it will make a copy. To repeat the action, press Command or Control
D on your keyboard. Make sure to check the
other options when you have an object
with pattern fill. Next transform tool is reflect and the keyboard
shortcut for Reflect tool is O. To reflect an object, you can just drag
the bounding box to the other side but for a
more controlled action, we can open the reflect tool by double-clicking on the
reflect tool in the toolbar, or right-click on the object and select Transform,
choose Reflect. Choose the axis from horizontal, vertical, or put any angle, and click Okay to reflect the selection or Copy
to make a duplicate. It is quite similar
to the rotate tool, where you can change
the center of rotation by moving
the center around. Select the object and click
once on the reflect tool. Now, move the center to the new location and drag
the object to reflect. Hold Alt before releasing
the mouse to make a copy. Make sure to check
the other options when using an object
with pattern fill. Next transform tool is scale. The keyboard shortcut for
scale tool is S. This tool, again, works in a
pretty similar way, you can just hold and drag the bounding box to
scale up or down, and holding Shift while dragging will keep the
proportions locked. To scale the object
more accurately click on the Scale tool and
place the center to the desired location and now drag to scale up or down
around that center. Hold Alt or Option
key to make a copy. To open the scale tool Settings, double-click on the tool and enter a value less
than 100 to scale down or more than
100 to scale up. Click Okay to apply
the changes to the selection or Copy
to make a duplicate. Here we have some extra
options like scale corners, and strokes and effects. Let's understand this
using an example. Here we have a rectangle
with stroke weight 10 points. Now, if we want to
scale it up by 200%, this will help us decide
whether we want the object to have 10 points stroke
weight even after resizing. Upon selecting Scale
Strokes and Effects, the object will scale
up proportionately. Similarly, for an object with rounded corners or any other
corner widget applied, select this option to scale
the corners proportionately. Check for the
pattern scale option if your object has
pattern fill in it. The last transform
tool is shear. Select the object and
click on the Shear tool. Place the center and now drag to shear the shape
around that center. Hold Alt or Option
key to make a copy. Double-click on the tool
to open the settings, and in the dialog box, enter the desired values. Click Okay to apply
the changes to selection or Copy to duplicate. There is another feature
that is Transform Each, which is really helpful
in pattern design. Here you can transform
multiple objects with just one command for example, when we want to resize
multiple objects, if I select them
all and transform, it will treat the
selection as one object. But when I choose
Transform Each, it will transform each
object separately. In this way, it's
easier to modify the positive and negative space while designing a pattern. You can choose any
action from here and click Okay or make a copy. Arrange is basically what
objects comes on top or back when you have multiple objects
overlapping on each other. You can select the
object and go to Object, Arrange or right-click
on the object, select Arrange, and choose
from Bring to Front, Bring Forward, Send
Backward, or Send to Back. Next we have is Align
and Distribute. You can find these options
in the object menu, control bar on top, and in the properties panel
when the object is selected. To align multiple objects, there are three
reference points. Align to art board, align to selection, and
align to a key object. With the reference point
as align to art board, when you click on an object
and align it to the center, it will bring the
object to the center of the art board but when you choose multiple objects and then align to center, it will bring all objects to the center of the
selection area. Now, to align to a key object, we need to choose the
key object first. To do that, select the objects, and now click once more
on the key object. You will notice a
highlight on the object. Now, when you select
align to center, it will align all the objects to the center of the key object. You can select
multiple objects and distribute them vertically
or horizontally. Choose the reference
point for the alignment. For example, two objects with different sizes can be
aligned in different ways. In Vertical Distribute setting, you can keep it top, center, or bottom aligned. Similarly, for the Horizontal
Distribute setting, it could be left aligned, center aligned,
or right aligned. You can also combine distribute
option with align to a key object and distribute the object at a specific
distance from the key object. To do that, select the
objects and now select the key object by clicking
once more on that object. Now, in the distribute option, choose Alignment, and enter
the value for distance. In the next lesson, we
will learn about group, lock, hide, and isolation mode.
10. Group, Lock, Hide Objects and Isolation Mode: You can combine several
objects into a group so that the objects are
treated as a single unit. You can then move or
transform a number of objects without affecting their
attributes or relative position. To create a group of objects, select the objects and go to Object menu and select Group. You can also right-click on the selection and choose Group. Or use Command G on Mac and Control G on PC
on your keyboard. To ungroup, select
the group and use keyboard shortcut Shift
Command G or Shift Control G. You can also go to Object menu on
top and select Ungroup, or just right-click on the
group and select Ungroup. Keep in mind that if
you select objects in different layers
and then group them, the objects are
grouped in the layer of the topmost selected object. Groups can also be
nested that is, They can be grouped within other groups to
form larger groups. Locking objects prevents you from selecting and editing them. You can lock multiple objects, groups, and layers. To lock, select the objects
or group of objects, and go to object menu
chose lock selection. To unlock all objects
in the document, choose object, unlock all. To lock the contents of
a layer or sublayer, you can use the lock
icon on layers panel. Click on it again to unlock. To hide or show
objects or layers, choose object and
hide selection. To show all objects, choose object and show all. Another way to hide
one or more objects, in the layers panel,
click on the eye icon next to the item
you want to hide. Click again to
redisplay the item. If you hide a layer or group, all items in that layer
or group are hidden. To delete an object or group, select it and press
Delete on keyboard. You can also choose Edit
and select Cut or Clear. To delete objects
using layers panel, select the layers with object and click on the "Delete"
icon at the bottom, or select Delete Layer from
the layers panel menu. If all the artwork
is on one layer, you can choose the sub-layer with that item and
then delete it. Next thing we need to
understand is isolation mode. This happens sometimes when you double-click on an
object by mistake. When you do that,
everything except for the selection
will look washed out and you won't be able to edit anything
other than the selection. This is a really helpful feature as isolation mode isolates the object so that
you can easily select and edit particular objects
or parts of the object. The layers panel displays only the artwork in the
isolated sub layer or group. When you exit isolation mode, the other layers and groups
reappear in the layers panel. To isolate a path
object or group, double-click on it using
the selection tool, or select the group
object or path, and click on the "Isolate
Selected Object" button in the Control Panel, or right-click on the object and choose "Isolate
Selected Path". You can also select the
object in the layers panel and choose "Enter Isolation Mode" from the
layers panel menu. When you exit isolation mode, press escape on your keyboard, or click exit isolation
mode one or more times or click anywhere in
the isolation mode bar. while using the selection tool double-click outside
the isolated group. We will use this
simple example here. I have an artwork of a bird and some flowers which are
grouped within groups. Now, if I want to
change the direction of these strokes in the
wings of the bird, I'll isolate that group. To do that, double-click
on the artwork. It will enter the
first subgroup. Now double-click again to
enter the group inside and keep doing it till you reach the group
with the strokes. In case you double-click
once more by mistake, and want to go back, click on the previous group
on this isolation bar. Now select the group, and change the angle
of the strokes. To exit, click
anywhere on the bar or just press escape
on your keyboard. The artwork will be
updated with the changes. Practice this with
the reference file provided in the Resources tab, it is going to be
really useful once you start creating
complex artworks. In the next lesson, we will
learn about selection tool
11. Selection Tools: In this lesson, we
will discuss about the different tools
for selecting objects. Before you can modify an object, you must distinguish it from
the other objects around it. One way to do it is by
using layers panel. You can select a single
object, a part of it, the entire group, or even the entire layer
with just one click. When a selection is made, you will see this rectangle
with a fill color. To change this color,
double-click on the layer and you
can change it here. Click outside to
deselect everything. The selection tool
or the black arrow, is the most commonly used tool, with keyboard shortcut V. It lets you select objects and groups by clicking or
dragging over them. Direct selection tool
or the white arrow, is the next most
commonly used tool, with the keyboard shortcut A. With this tool, you can
select individual objects, path segments, anchor points, and it does not depend
on the group settings. You cannot select an
object within a group using selection tool
without entering the isolation mode but with direct selection
tool, you can do that. To edit a part of group, select the objects using direct selection tools
while holding Shift and now click on the
selection tool to view the bounding box and
now you can edit it. When you click on an object
using the white arrow, you can see all the
anchor points and paths. Select any anchor point or path segment and move it
around to edit the shape. When you click on
an anchor point, it's properties will appear
in the control panel where you can change the
corner type, adjust handles, delete or add anchor points. Click on multiple anchor
points while holding Shift to add to selection and
edit them simultaneously. Next we have is the
group selection tool. You can find this
tool in the toolbar by holding on the
direct selection tool. This is quite similar
to working in isolation mode in
a reverse manner. Since here we are
adding to our selection rather than isolating
it from the selection. For example we have the same artwork here with
the bird and flowers, which have group within groups. Now when I click
on the Stroke in the wings using group
selection tool, it will select that shape. Now when I click again, it will select the
entire group of strokes. Click again, and it will
select the entire bird then click again
and it will select the entire artwork that
the bird is a part of. This is good when
you want to edit only a part of the group
without ungrouping everything. Next selection
tool in the set is lasso tool with
keyboard shortcut Q. It lets you select
objects, anchor points, or path segments by dragging around all or part
of your object. It is really helpful
when you have multiple ungrouped objects
placed close to each other. Simply start dragging
your cursor around the objects that you want to select and once you are done, click on the selection tool
to view the bounding box. You can group them, edit them, or delete them at the same time. There is one more
tool which you can find in the advanced
toolbar menu, which is magic wand tool. You can open the
tool setting from Window menu and
select Magic Wand. We can edit the settings
here as it will only select items with
the same attribute. For example if I select
fill color here. Now in my artwork, when
I click on a shape with the red color using
the magic wand tool, it will automatically
select all the shapes, with that same red color. Now I can change or edit the color using
the color picker. Similarly, you can choose different attributes
in the tool setting. Another common way of
selecting objects in illustrator is by
going to select menu. Here you can choose to
select objects within an artwork with same attributes
like same fill color, stroke color, stroke
width and more. You can also find this
tool in the control panel. Select one object
and go to select, Same and choose the
attribute and it will select everything with
that attribute in the artwork which you can edit. In the next lesson, we will start with essential
drawing tools.
12. Essential Drawing Tools: One of the most
common drawing tools in Illustrator is the Pen tool. You can find this
tool in the toolbar, and the keyboard
shortcut for pen tool is P. It might seem a little tricky and difficult to get started with this tool. To make it easier for
you to follow along, I've included some practice
sheets in the resources. You can download them and
practice as much as possible. Open the file in Illustrator, you might notice that the
drawing looks washed out. It is because I have converted the layer into a template layer. Template layers are locked
non-printing layers, which we can use as
reference to trace. Since the layer is locked, we'll create a new
layer and draw on that. Now let's see how we can draw a straight line segments
with the Pen tool. The simplest path that you
can draw with a Pen tool is a straight line made by clicking the Pen tool to
create two anchor points. By continuing to click, you create a path made of straight line segments
connected by corner points. To do so, select the Pen tool or press
P on your keyboard. Position the Pen tool where you want the straight
line segment to begin and click to define
the first anchor point. The first segment
you draw will not be visible until you click
a second anchor point. If the direction lines appear, you have accidentally
dragged the Pen tool, undo the step by pressing Control or Command Z on your
keyboard and click again. Continue clicking to create straight-line segments
following the reference. Hold Shift, and
it will constrain the movement to a
multiple of 45 degree. The last anchor point you add always appears as
a solid square, indicating that it is selected. Previously defined anchor points become hollow and de-selected, as you add more anchor points. To complete a path,
you have two options. In case you want to
leave the path open, you can either press Enter
on PC or return on mac, or choose selection tool or
any other tool to deselect. To create a closed path position the Pen tool over the
first hollow anchor point, a small circle appears next to the Pen tool pointer when
it is positioned correctly, click to close the path. To modify the shape, you can add or delete anchor points. To add an anchor
point using Pen tool, place your cursor on
the path and you will notice a plus sign
next to the Pen icon. Click anywhere on the
path to add anchor point. Now when you place
the cursor over an anchor point a minus
sign will appear. This is when you can click
to delete an anchor point. To modify the shape using direct selection tool
or the white arrow, you can click and select
individual anchor points or path and move around or use the Control Panel
Settings to edit. You can also select an
anchor point or path segment and press Delete or Backspace key on your keyboard. To join two anchor points, select the anchor
points, go to object, choose path and join, or press Control or Command
J on your keyboard. Now let's draw curved
lines with Pen tool. Few things to keep in mind while creating curved
lines with Pen tool. To create curved
lines with Pen tool, what you need to practice is instead of click and release, here you will click and drag towards the
direction of the path. Don't move your cursor too far while moving the
handles trying to match the line as you can modify the handle
directions later as well. Curves are easier
to edit if you draw the shape using as few
anchor points as possible. Using too many anchor points can introduce unwanted
bumps in a curve. Draw widely spread anchor point, and practice shaping curves by adjusting the
direction handles. To create a curve line, select the Pen tool or
press P on your keyboard. Position the Pen
tool where you want the curve to begin and hold down the mouse button and drag to set the slope of the curve
segment you are creating, and then release
the mouse button. Hold the Shift key to keep the angle at a
multiple of 45 degree. Position the Pen tool where
you want the curve to end and continue to add
more anchor points. Remember to drag and not click. You can edit the direction
handles later as well. To close the path,
position the Pen tool over the first hollow anchor point and click or drag
to close the path. If you click, it will
become a corner point where the two direction handles
will move independently. If you drag, then it will become a curved point where both direction handles
will move together. To leave the path open, simply click Escape
on your keyboard, you can also press Enter
or Return on keyboard. Selecting another tool, or the selection tool
will also end the path. Now how we can combine
straight lines with curves? For this start with a
straight or curved path, click for the straight path and click and drag for curved path. Now click on an anchor point
you want to make corner. You will notice a
small arrow symbol, which is also the
anchor point tool, and now it has turned
into a corner. You can continue with the
straight or curved path. To modify any of the anchor
points or path segments, you can use the
Control Panel Settings with the anchor point
or paths selected. Next we have is the
Curvature tool. This is a really
interesting tool that Adobe introduced in 2014 with the release
of Illustrator CC. Simply put, in Pen tool, you need to think about where to put the next anchor point, but in Curvature tool, you get a better
control over the curve, and also a preview of the line segment is available
that you are about to draw, which is really helpful. To use this tool,
select the tool from the toolbar and click
once on the art board. Now place your mouse
on the next point, and depending on the
movement of your mouse, the Curvature tool will
create a curved path. With Curvature tool,
you click once to get a curved point and double-click
to create a corner point. This tool can be used
in different ways. Let's understand this
using an example. As you can see in
this reference, the corner points
are pretty obvious, we will use the
Curvature tool to draw these anchor points first. We will Start with one-click, but rest all will be double-click to create
the corner points. Now place your Curvature tool on top of the straight path, and you will notice a plus sign. Hold and drag the path to match the curve
in the reference. You can move this around until you find the closest match. Upon release, you will notice a new anchor points
added to the path. With the help of
Direct Selection Tool, you can edit this anytime. Repeat the same for
all the other path. You can also combine
Pen tool with Curvature tool to get
the desired result. For example, use the
Pen tool to draw the corner points and now adjust the curves in-between
using the Curvature tool. In the next lesson,
we will learn about some free form drawing
tools like Pencil, Paintbrush and Blob Brush.
13. Freeform Drawing Tools: In this lesson, we will discuss some free form drawing
tools in Illustrator. Let's start with
the pencil tool. You can find this
tool in the toolbar. The keyboard shortcut for
pencil tool is N. Pencil tool lets you draw
open and closed paths as if you were drawing
with a pencil on paper. It is most useful for sketching or creating
hand-drawn look. Once you draw a path, you can immediately
change it if needed. The points are set down as
you draw with pencil tool, you do not determine where
they are positioned, however you can adjust them
once the path is complete. Position the tool where
you want the path to begin and drag to draw. As you draw, a dotted
line follows the pointer. The path takes on the
current stroke and fill attributes and remains
selected by default. Anchor points appear
at both ends of the path and at various
points along it. Hold the shift key and use the pencil tool to draw
straight segments Constrained to 0,
45 or 90 degree. You can adjust the pencil
tool settings to get the desired results
depending on your project. Double-click on the "Pencil
tool" to view the settings. If you keep fidelity
to accurate, it will follow the
exact movement of your mouse or pen in case
you are using a pen tablet. If you move it towards smooth, your line will get
a smooth path. Choose the preset that suit
your drawing needs best. Selecting Fill New
Pencil Strokes, apply the fill to pencil strokes you draw after
selecting this option, but not to the existing
pencil strokes. Alt or Option Key toggles
to smooth tool option. With pencil tool selected. If I click "Alt" or "Option", it will change to
smooth tool and I can draw over the
path to smoothen it. This tool is also available
in the advanced toolbar menu. Another setting we have here is closed paths when ends
meet within 15 pixels. As you can see this
time the path closed automatically when I move my cursor close to
the starting point. The last two options determine whether or not you can change or merge the selected path when you are within a
certain distance of it. Next free form drawing tool
is the Paintbrush Tool. You can find this tool in the toolbar or panel
in the Window menu. The keyboard shortcut
for paintbrush tool is B. Paintbrush has basically
the stroke properties, but it gives a freehand
drawing experience and with different brushes, you can enhance the
appearance of path. You can apply a brush
strokes to existing path, or you can use the
paintbrush tool to draw a path and apply a brush
stroke simultaneously. For brush settings, double-click on the tool to open the Settings menu adjust the fidelity between accurate to smooth depending
on your project requirement. If you have edit
selected paths clicked, you can select the path and continue drawing to
change the path. The number will
determine how close the path needs to be to modify. Holding shift will constrain the movement to a
multiple of 45 degree. To create a closed path
using paintbrush tool, we need to press "Alt" or
"Option key" before releasing. In case you want to have
a fill color as well, you can keep the fill new
brush stroke box check. With the brush tool selected, you can use the
keyboard shortcut, square bracket keys to
change the brush size. Where clicking on
the left bracket will reduce the size, and clicking on the right
bracket will increase the size. There are different types
of brushes in illustrator. Calligraphic, scatter, art,
patterns and bristle brushes. Calligraphic brushes create
strokes that resemble those drawn with an angled
point of a calligraphic pen. Illustrator also
provides with a set of calligraphic brushes
that you can use. To create your own
calligraphic brush click on the "Plus" icon here, or open the brush panel
menu and click "New Brush". Select "Calligraphic
Brush," click "Okay" and In the
brush options Window, give a name and now set the
angle, roundness and size. Now click "Okay", select
the brush and draw your path or you can also apply the brush to
an existing path. Scatter brush dispose copies
of an object along the path. To create one,
select the object, and now click on the "Plus icon" and select "Scatter
brush." Click "Okay". Now play around with the
settings with preview on so you can see the
changes in real-time. You can also choose
the color option from tints and shades or hue, click "Okay" to save. To edit an existing brush, double-click on that brush and you can edit
the changes here. If you want to keep a
copy of that brush, duplicate it in the panel menu, and make changes to the copy. Art brushes, stretch
a brush shape or object shape evenly along
the length of the path. Bristle brush creates
stroke with the appearance of a natural brush
with bristles. Pattern brushes are made of individual tiles that
repeat along the path. You can use simple to complex shape to create your
own custom pattern brush. To create a pattern brush, select the artwork and
click on this plus icon here. Choose "Pattern Brush". In the brush option window,
select the Scale, add spacing and you can choose up to five tiles for different sides and
corners of the path. Click on this arrow to see
the available options. On the right, you
can flip the brush, adjust the fit and color. Click "Okay", to save the brush. To edit it double-click
on the brush again. Play around with this
using simple shapes first and then move
to complex shapes. Illustrator offers a wide
range of brushes you can check out by clicking on this
Brush Library Menu icon. To delete a brush, select the brush and click
on this delete icon. To save a brush library
that you can use in future or access from
another document, go to brushes panel menu and
choose "Save Brush Library". Enter a name and save. To check create a new document
and in the brushes panel, go to Panel Menu. Open Brush Library, user-defined select
your brush library. Next we have is the
blob brush tool. You can find this
tool in the toolbar by holding cursor
on the brush tool. The keyboard shortcut for
blob brush tool is Shift + B. The way you draw using a blob brush is quite similar
to the paintbrush tool. Except blob brush works with a fill color instead
of a stroke. It actually creates a
filled area with no stroke. Though you can use the
calligraphic brushes to define the appearance, but the final output
will be a fill shape. You can add just
the fidelity and other settings by
double-clicking on the tool. You can also adjust
the brush size using the square bracket
keyboard shortcut. Where left bracket reduces the size and right bracket
increases the size. When you draw a
shape over another with the same color
using blob brush, it will merge the two shapes. For different colors. It will
be two different shapes. This tool comes very
handy when you want to draw some freehand
marks and shapes. Even if the stroke color
is selected while drawing, it will automatically
convert to fill color. These are some of the best
drawing tools when you want a more free-form style of drawing and you have a
drawing tablet connected. If you are using mouse, pen tool and curvature
tool works best. In the next lesson,
we will discuss about shape builder
tool and path finder
14. Shape Builder Tool and Path Finder: To explain these two tools, I'll use the same examples
and use the tools one by one. Shape builder tool you
can find in the toolbar. With shape builder tool, you can create new shapes by combining and erasing
parts of simpler ones. The keyboard shortcut
for this tool is Shift plus M. It can be used in
three different modes. First, as a merge mode where we combine two or more shapes
to create a new shape. Select the shapes and now
select the shape builder tool. With the cursor movement, you will notice that now the individual shapes
are shaded in grey. Now, if you click and
drag over these shapes, you will notice that
the shapes will then be merged as one final shape. One thing we need to
keep in mind is that the path needs to be closed for this grey
area to be seen. This way, you can combine
as many shapes to make them as one by simply
dragging over the gray area. Second is the extract mode, which allows you to extract any section out of the
multiple overlapping shapes. Select the shapes and now
choose the shape builder tool or press Shift plus
M. As you can see, the sections are
highlighted in grey. To extract a section, just click on that shape once. Now with the selection tool, you can move around each
section individually. Third and the last is
the subtraction mode, where you can delete or
erase a particular section. Select everything and choose
the shape builder tool. When you press Alt on PC
or Option key on Mac, you will notice the
small plus icon next to the cursor will
turn into a minus. Now whichever section you
click will be erased. One thing to note here is
that with shape builder tool, you can control which sections
you would like to delete. Let's try these actions
using Pathfinder now. You can open the pathfinder
panel from the Window menu. To use Pathfinder in a merge mode. Select the objects and click on the "Unite" option
in Pathfinder. It will merge the
objects as one. To use it in an extract mode, select the objects and click on "Divide" option
in Pathfinder. With Pathfinder, the final
shapes are grouped as one. To move them individually, right-click and choose Ungroup. I'll go to Object
and select Ungroup. Next is the subtraction mode. Unlike shape builder
where you can control which section
you want to delete, here you need to choose the appropriate
pathfinder option. For example, when we select the two objects and choose
minus front option, this will delete the
object that is in front along with this section of
back that is intersecting. Choose the Intersect option and it will delete
the two shapes, except for the
intersecting shape. Exclude will only delete the
shape that is intersecting. Next, we have trim option. Let's try this using three
sets of overlapping shapes. One with fill and stroke, second set with only fill, and third set with only stroke. When we apply trim
to the first set, it divides it into
two shapes which can be ungrouped and moved
around individually. But the shapes are left with only fill and the
stroke is lost. In the second set, the
result is pretty same, except there was no stroke
from the beginning. When we try it on the third set, you will get to know that
it only works on fill path. Merge option is quite similar to the trim option and it also
works only on fill path. You will notice the difference only when the path
have same fill. For example, here we have
two sets of objects, one with two different colors and second with the
same fill color. When I use the merge
option on the first set, it will just divide
the two shapes. But when I use it
on the second set with same color objects, the final shape will merge
the two objects into one. Crop option plays
an important role in the pattern design process. To explain this better, I'll draw two sets of stripes. First, one using strokes. To do that, draw a line. Now drag and hold Alt or
Option key to make a copy. Now press Command or Ctrl
D to repeat the action. For the second set, draw rectangle with fill
and no stroke. Now press Alt or Option key
and drag to make a copy. Press Command or Ctrl D
to repeat the action. Now draw a rectangle on top, smaller than the stripes height on both sets. Select the first set
and choose Crop. You will notice the
rectangle on top remains, but there is no stroke to it and the strokes inside
are also lost. When you crop the second set, only the shapes inside the rectangle remains
and become one group. The crop only works
on fill objects and it removes everything
outside the object on top. Outline option basically divides everything and
converts to outline. You can ungroup and use
these shapes individually. Last one is minus back, where the shape on
back is removed. Now all these shapes
can be achieved by using either shape
builder or Pathfinder, but knowing when to use
which one is important. For example, when you have multiple overlapping shapes with lines like this and you
want to make it one shape, with shape builder tool, you will have to drag over each intersection to
merge the shapes. Whereas with Pathfinder, you can just select
everything and click "Unite". Another example is
when you want to edit multiple sets of objects. For example, I want
to merge these plus icons and color
them individually. I can just select all
of them, click "Unite", and now ungroup to color
each of them separately. Apart from building shapes, there is another way of
using shape builder tool, which is to clean
up your drawing and coloring them without
creating closed paths. For example, if I want to create this fish shape
using the reference, I can just trace over it with lines intersecting and
extending the edges. My focus here is to just create the different shapes
that need to be colored. Now select everything and
select the Shape Builder tool. Pick the color you
want to fill a section with and click on that section. Repeat the same with each section using same
or different color. Even if we use the same color, it will create separate shape, which you can recolor later. Once all the sections
are filled with color, all we need to do is remove
the strokes without fill. There are multiple
ways to do that. Using the Shape Builder tool, hold Alt or Option key and click on the anchor points
or path you want to delete. Choose, Select Same
Appearance from the select menu and click on the stroke without
fill and it will automatically select all
the strokes without fill. You can delete them at once. Double-click on the tool
to check the settings. Just make sure the selection
is set at free form and the pick color is from
swatches or else it will choose the colors
only from the artwork. You can play around
with this tool and create so many
interesting shapes. This is one of my
favorite and most frequently used tools
in Illustrator. In the next lesson, we will
learn about the type tool
15. Type Tool: With this tool, learn
how to add text, work with type objects and
wrap text in your vector art. You can find this
tool in the toolbar, in the header menu and in the panels from
the window menu. The keyboard shortcut
for Type Tool is T. There are different ways you can add text
in your artwork. Now to add text at a point, select the Type Tool or
press T on your keyboard. Just click at a point
and type along the cursor. To enter text in an area, you can either drag to define
a bounding area or convert any existing shape
to bounding area by clicking anywhere on
the path of the object, your object will be filled
with the placeholder text. To enter text on a path or
shape outline draw the path. Now select the type
on a path tool by holding your cursor
on the Type Tool, click at the beginning
of the path, or at any point on the path. Replace the placeholder
text with your text. Another thing we can do is
wrap text around an object. To do that, grab the
type tool and click and drag to create a
bounding box where you would like the text to
be on your art board. Replace the placeholder
text with your text. I will just use the
placeholder text for now. Place your shape over the text. I'm using a simple ellipse shape, but this works with
any shape or object. Whatever shape you choose, make sure it is placed
on the top of the text. Once you have the text and
shape in place, select both, now go to Object, choose Text Wrap,
and select Make. If you want to edit the space between the text and the object, go to Object, Text Wrap Options, and in the window edit
the offset value. Check the preview
and click Okay. You can also move around the object and the text
will adjust accordingly. Next we have is the
character panel. If you don't see
it, go to Window, choose Type, and then
choose Character. You can also edit the character
and paragraph settings in the control panel and properties panel with
the text selected. In the character panel, you can choose the font
from the drop-down menu. Below that, you can choose the style from the
available option. Now on the left we
have font size. You can adjust the size with these arrows or enter a value. On the right, we have leading, which is the vertical space
between lines of type. Click here to adjust the value. Then we have kerning, which is the process of
adding or subtracting space between specific
pairs of character. On the right, we have tracking, which is the process
of loosening or tightening the spacing between the characters in
an entire block of text. Below that, we have vertical
scale and horizontal scale, which can stretch the text
vertically or horizontally. Then you can use
the baseline shift to move selected characters up or down relative to the baseline of the
surrounding text. On the right, we have
character rotation. Here you can enter the
angle value for rotation. You can use all
these settings to edit your text as per your need. Another interesting feature
here is the touch-type tool. It is included in the
Advanced Toolbar menu. But here you can find
this in the panel menu. The keyboard shortcut for this tool is Shift plus T The touch-type
tool lets you move, resize, rotate, and overlap individual character
by dragging. Select the Touch Type Tool
or press Shift plus T on your keyboard and now select any character and
drag the handles of the bounding box to
modify the character. Let's check the
paragraph panel now. You use the paragraph
panel to change the formatting of
columns and paragraphs. At the top, we
have alignment and justification where you can align the text to left,
center, or right. Justify with the last line aligned to left,
center, or right. Next we have bullet
points and numbering. We have left indent. Indention is the amount
of space between the text and the boundary
of the type object. It affects only the
selected paragraph, so you can easily set different intentions for
different paragraphs. Next option is to set the space before and
after paragraphs. With hyphenation, you
can specify how words break using automatic
hyphenation setting. Little more about
how you can use type on a path tool
for your artworks. Suppose I want to type something
that is in an arc shape. Now to create this, I'll create a path
that is in an arc shape.The easiest way is to draw a circle
and cut it in half. Now select the type tool. When you move your cursor
close to the path, it will turn into type on the path tool since the shape we are using
is an open path. If it is a closed path, then it will type
inside the area. Now click on the path
and enter your text. Start from the left corner
so it will be easy to align. To align the text to center you can use the normal
paragraph setting. To check more options, select the path and go to Type, select Type On A Path option. In the option window, you can choose an effect. Align the text to
center, ascender, descender or baseline,
and adjust the spacing. Click on the Preview to
see change in real time. Click, Okay to save the changes. You can also get similar
results with warp effect. Select the text
and go to Object, choose Envelope Distort,
and select, Make With Warp. In the Warp Options window select the style from the list, horizontal or vertical bend
value, and distortion value. Check the preview and click, Okay to save the changes. Once the effect is applied, you can edit the settings in the control panel and
properties panel as well, with the objects selected. To edit the text characters, double-click on
the text to enter isolation mode and
you can edit it. To pick a text style and
apply it to another text, you can use the eyedropper tool. Select the text
you would like to change and now with
the eyedropper tool, click on the source file, and it will replace it
with the new text-style. In the next lesson, we will
discuss about the eraser, knife, and scissors tool.
16. Eraser, Knife and Scissors Tool: Eraser tool lets you remove
parts of your artwork. You can find this
tool in the toolbar. The keyboard shortcut for Eraser tool is
"shift" plus "E". Select the Eraser tool and drag over the area that
you want to remove. You can adjust the eraser
size with keyboard shortcuts, square bracket keys where the left bracket
reduces the size, and right bracket increases it. If nothing is selected, it will erase a
part of everything. Select an object, and it will only erase a part of
the selected object. Double-click on the eraser tool to open the eraser
tool settings. You can customize
the erasers angle, roundness, and size here. Knife tool cuts the shape
into multiple shapes. You can find this tool in
the Advanced Toolbar menu, along with the eraser
and scissor tool. The knife tool cuts object
along a freehand path you draw with the tool and does a precise
cut and divides the object, but does not remove any part. When nothing is selected, it divides every object that the knife tool
passes through. When an object is selected, it only works on that object. The scissor tool splits a path at anchor points
or along segments. You can find this
tool in the toolbar by holding the cursor
on eraser tool. The keyboard shortcut
for scissors tool is C. Select the scissors
tool or press "C," and now click on any path and
it will split the path. When you cut a closed
path with fill inside, the resulting shapes remain
open with the fill inside. There is another thing
called stray points. Anytime you use the text tool
or pen tool in Illustrator, there is a good chance you may have created a stray
point in your file. Using the text or pen tool, if you simply click somewhere and then choose another tool, you end up with a stray point. Accidental stray points are also created when you try to delete line segments while using Direct Selection Tool instead
of using Selection tool. Removing these extra
and unwanted points and paths is important to prevent any possible error on your data and easy to do. From the Object menu, go to path and
select "Clean Up." This will open a small
window where you can select what type of items
you would like to clean up. To check, make a selection, and you will see if
they're still there. In the next lesson, we will discuss about the eyedropper, gradient, and mesh tool
17. Eye Dropper, Gradient and Mesh Tool: The eyedropper tool lets
you pick a color from an object or image and
apply it to other objects. You can find this
tool in the toolbar, and the keyboard shortcut
for eyedropper tool is I. Select an object with
the selection tool, click on the eyedropper tool
or press I on your keyboard. Select the color
you want to sample, and the sample color is applied
on the selected object. A gradient is a
graduated blend of two or more colors or
tints of the same color. You can find this
tool in the toolbar, or in the panel from
the window menu. The keyboard shortcut
for gradient tool is G. To get started, let's create two rectangles, one with fill and the other
one with fill and stroke. To apply a gradient, select the object
and double-click on the gradient tool to
open the settings. Illustrator provides
a predefined set of gradients that you can find by clicking on the arrow next to the
gradient thumbnail. There is also a wide range of gradients in the
swatches library. To use them, click on the
swatches panel menu and open the swatch library
and choose gradients. When you click on
one, it will open in a new window and when
you click on them, it will be added to
the swatches panel. After the gradient is applied, you can edit the gradient properties in the
gradient panel, control panel, and
properties panel with the objects selected. The gradient slider includes these small circles on each
corners and along the bar. These are color stops. Clicking once will
select it and double-clicking it will allow us to change the
color of the stroke. Here you can see we have three options available
to choose from. The first one is most versatile. You can choose the
RGB color spectrum. If you don't see other colors, change the gradient grayscale to RGB by clicking on this menu. The second option is swatches. Here we have illustrated
default color swatches. The third option
is color picker, which you can use
to pick any color from our document or an image. Once you have
selected the colors, you can choose the
location of your stops, and this will change the
look of the gradient. To do this, just click and drag the color stops
left or right. You can also edit the
location of the midpoint, which is the small diamond here, by dragging it to
the left or right. You can also add
extra color stops to the gradient by simply
clicking below the slider. You will notice
when the cursor is moved close to the
bottom of the bar, a small plus sign appears. This is when you can add another color stop
by clicking on it. Now to edit the
color of this stop, simply double-click on
it and change the color. To delete a color stop, select it and click on this Delete/Stop button,
or dragging downwards. In Illustrator, you can create
three types of gradients. First one is linear. Use this gradient type to
blend colors from one point to another in a straight
line. Next is radial. Use this gradient type
to blend colors from one point to another
in a circular pattern. Third type is pre-form, and you can use
this gradient type to create a graduated blend of color stops within a shape in an ordered or
random sequence. Here you can see
the preview of the active or the previously
used gradient. Next to it is a small arrow with the drop-down menu of
existing gradients. Below you can choose if you
want the gradient to be applied on the fill
color or the stroke. Under that, you can
see the small icon which can help reverse
the gradient colors. To edit the appearance
even further, you can choose an angle from the given preset or
enter your own value. We can also edit the opacity of a color stop and play
with the transparency. When you are using
gradients for strokes, make sure to check these extra
settings for the corners. To save the new or modified gradient as a swatch
in the current file, you can click the Add to
Swatches in the gradient menu. To fill an object
with a gradient, simply drag the gradient
over the object, or select the object and click on the gradient from
the swatches menu. You can adjust most
of the settings on the object itself,
like the angle, origin, midpoint location, by pressing G on your keyboard
with the selected object. Next tool is the mesh tool. You can find this tool
in the toolbar by holding the cursor on
the gradient tool. The keyboard shortcut
for this tool is U. To use this tool, first, we need to create a shape. Once the basic shape is ready, select the mesh tool and
click on the object. You will notice the
object is converted into a mesh with a minimum
number of mesh lines. Continue clicking to
add more mesh points. To add vertical planes click
on the horizontal axis, and to add horizontal planes
click on the vertical axis. You can edit a mesh object
by adding, deleting, moving, and coloring the mesh points individually
with gradients. To delete a mesh point, click on the mesh point
while holding Alt on PC or Option key on Mac with
the Mesh Tool selected. To move a mesh point, drag it with the mesh tool
for direct selection tool. You can select
multiple mesh points using the Lasso tool as well. After selecting,
pick a color from the swatches or use
the eyedropper tool, and those mesh points will have a gradient effect
with that color. You can continue doing it, and it will give a
3D rendered look. For converting a mesh object
back to a path object, select the mesh object, go to Object menu, choose Path, and
select Offset Path. Now enter zero for the
offset value, click Ok. When you move the mesh object, you will see the
object as outline. In the next lesson, we will learn about the swatches panel
18. The Swatches Panel: Swatches are named colors, tints, gradients, and patterns. The swatches associated with a document appear here
in the swatches panel. You can find this in the panels. If you don't see it, go to
Window and select Swatches. Swatches can appear
individually or in groups. You can view them as
list or thumbnails. To change the thumbnail size, click on the panel menu
and choose from here. Illustrator offers
a wide range of swatches that you can find
by clicking in the icon on the bottom of
the swatches panel or in the swatches panel menu, by clicking on Open
Swatch Library. Swatch libraries are a
collection of preset colors, including ink libraries and thematic libraries
such as camouflage, nature, greek, and jewel tones. When you open a swatch library, it appears in a new panel. You can view, select, and sort swatches
in the library, the same as you do in
the swatches panel. However, you cannot add, delete or edit the swatches in the swatches library panel. If you want to add selective swatches or groups
to your swatch panel, you can do that by
clicking and dragging individual swatches
or the group icon to copy the entire group. The swatches panel and the Swatch Library panel can contain the following
types of swatches. A process color that
is printed using combination of the four
standard process ink, by default, Illustrator defines new swatches as process colors. You can identify a
global color swatch, by the global color icon when
the panel is in list view, or a triangle in the lower corner when
it's in thumbnail view. A global color is automatically updated throughout your
artwork when you edit it. A spot color is a pre-mixed
ink that is used instead of, or in addition to
CMYK process ink. You can identify a
spot color swatch by the spot color icon when
the panel is in list view, or a dot in the lower corner, then it's in thumbnail view. Next, we have the
gradient swatches, which is a graduated blend of two or more colors or
tints of the same color. Next, we have pattern swatches, which are repeating paths, compound paths, texts with
solid fills or no fills. Next is the color groups, which can contain process, spot, and global process colors. They cannot contain pattern, gradient, none, or
registration swatches. The none and
registration swatches are in-built and
cannot be removed. Then a selected objects fill
or stroke contains a color, gradient, or pattern applied
from the swatches panel. The applied swatch is highlighted
in the swatches panel. To create your own color
swatches create a rectangle, and fill it with
the desired color using the eyedropper
or color picker tool. Now click on the plus icon
that says new swatch, or go to the
swatches panel menu, and select New Swatch. In the window, enter the name, choose the color type, and whether you want
to keep it global , and the color mode. Click Okay to save it, and it will be added
to the panels. You can also simply drag the
swatch to add to the panel. Now to save a group, select the colored rectangles, or the artwork and click
on the folder icon on new color group from the
swatches panel menu. In the window, enter the name. Now choose whether you
want to create the group from selected Swatches
or selected artwork. You can convert them
to global colors if you want. Click Okay to save. To save a new gradient swatch, select the shape filled
with the gradient, and double-click on
the gradient tool to open the gradient panel. Now click on the
small arrow next to the gradient thumbnail and
choose Add to Swatches, and it will be added
to the swatches panel. If you just click on the rectangle and drag
to the swatches panel, it will be saved
as a pattern type, and not as a gradient. You can create patterns
using two ways. For the first one, create
artwork for the pattern, and now draw a
bounding box around the artwork to control the spacing between
the pattern elements, or to clip out portions
of the pattern. Make sure the bounding
box has no stroke often. Choose Object, Arrange, Send to Back to make the
rectangle the backmost object. Now drag the artwork
to the swatches panel. If you drag just the artwork
without any bounding box, it will still save as a pattern, but you won't be able to add just the spacing
between the motifs. Second, method to create a pattern tile is using
the pattern option tool. Select your artwork,
go to Object, choose Pattern, and Make. A message will appear saying the new swatch has been
added to the swatches panel. Click Okay, and continue. In the pattern
options dialog box, provide a name for the pattern. Tile type will decide how you
want to lay out the tiles. It would be grid where the
center of each tile is horizontally and
vertically aligned to the center of
the adjacent tiles. Brick by row, where the
tiles are arranged in rows. Brick by column, where the
tiles are arranged in columns. Second by column, where tiles
are hexagonal in shape, and arranged in columns. Finally, hexagon by row, where the tiles are
arranged in rows. Next option is brick offset, which only applies to
brick by row or column. It determines by how much
tile with the center of the tiles in adjacent rows
or columns are moved. Width and height specify the overall height and
width of the tile. To create more negative
space between the motifs enter value larger than
the size of the artwork. It will insert empty
space between tiles. Size tile to art. Select this option when you want the tile size exactly
same as the artwork size. Select Move Tile with
art to ensure that moving the artwork causes
the tile to move as well. Horizontal and vertical spacing. When you choose
Size Tile to Art, you can add just
the space between adjacent tiles
using these values. When adjacent tiles overlap, choose which tiles
appear in front. With copies, you can
select how many rows and columns of tiles are visible
while modifying the pattern. Dim copies determine
the opacity of copies of the artwork tile preview
while modifying the pattern. Select Show Tile Edge option to display a box
around the tile. Select Show Swatch bound to display unit portion of the
pattern that is repeated. In the bar below
the control panel, choose to save or discard
changes made to the pattern. Whichever way you
create the pattern. To edit it, you have to double-click on the Swatch
in the swatches panel, and enter this window with the pattern options dialog box to modify, and save it again. If you want to make
changes to a new copy, duplicate the swatch by clicking on the
Swatches panel menu, or click save a copy after making the changes in the pattern
options dialog box. If you want to learn more
about surface pattern design, I have explained the
pattern options tool, and basics of surface pattern
design in my first class. You can refer that too. Let's discuss some more
features of the swatches panel. If you want to limit
your swatches panel to only the colors that are
used in the document. You can select all
unused swatches from the panel menu and delete
them using the delete icon. To select the entire group, click on the Color Group
icon, and choose Delete. To move swatches
into a color group, drag individual color swatches to an existing color group. Hold shift to select
multiple swatches. To import individual
swatches from another document copy
and paste objects that use this swatch. The imported swatch appears
in the swatches panel. In case you want to
save your swatches in the library that you can
access from another document, go to the Swatches panel menu. Choose Save Swatch
Library as ASE, or Save Swatch Library as AI. Enter a name and click Save. Now open a new document, and open the Swatches panel. Go to the panel menu and
choose Open Swatch Library, choose User Defined, and choose your saved
swatches from here. It will open as a new panel, but you can simply
drag the swatches or groups to add to
your swatches panel. In the next lesson,
we will discuss about some interesting modify
tools like width, blend and repeat tools.
19. Width, Blend and Repeat Tool: The Width tool lets you create
variable-width strokes and creates stroke profiles so you can apply styles consistently. You can find this tool in the toolbar and the
keyboard shortcut for Width tool is Shift plus W. This tool works only on strokes and you can edit the settings in the
stroke profiles. Let's start by drawing a path. It could be straight or curved, and we'll keep the
width at 20 points. Now select the Width tool
and place the cursor anywhere on the path and
drag to adjust the width. You can make it wide or narrow
by dragging the two ends. To make pointed ends, drag the points at the
ends of the stroke. To delete a point,
double click on the width point and in the
window you can choose Delete. In the strokes panel, edit the properties like caps,
corner and alignment. You can even apply
dashed line effect and since this is a
new stroke profile, you can add to profiles
by clicking on the profile drop down menu and
choose Add to profiles. Now you can select
multiple strokes and apply the stroke profile to all
of them with one click. To flip a stroke profile, select the stroke and click
on this flip along icon, this is an amazing tool
and you can change the look of an entire pattern
using just this tool. Please note that
Width tool does not work if the stroke has
brush applied to it. Blend tool morphs shapes and colors between two
or more objects. You can find this tool
in the toolbar or go to object menu and choose
Blend and select Make. To edit the blend settings,
use Blend Options. The keyboard shortcut
for Blend tool is W. You can blend objects to create and distribute shapes evenly
between two objects. You can also blend between two open paths to create a
smooth transition between objects or you can
combine blends of colors and objects to create color transitions in the
shape of a particular object. Let's understand each of
these options using example. To create a blend
between two objects, select the objects and select the Blend
tool or press W on your keyboard and now click on the first object
and then the second object. You can also go to Object, choose Blend, and click Make. Now to edit the blend options, double click on the tool. The blend could be
smooth, specified steps or specified distance. When you choose smooth,
it will give us smooth transition but
for specified steps, you can choose the number of steps within the transition, and for specified
distance you can control the distance between
the steps in the blend. Once you create a blend, the blended objects are
treated as one object. If you move one of
the original objects or edit the original
objects anchor point, the blend changes accordingly. In addition, the new
objects blended between the original objects don't
have their own anchor points. Now let's try it with open path. I have two half
circle shapes here. Now select the two shapes
and choose Blend tool. Click on the first path, and then on the second path, open the Blend Options and here I can adjust the steps
with the arrow keys. Let's try the color
option to create blend between objects with
different fill colors. This is really useful when you want to create color palettes, especially for monochromatic
and analogous color schemes. Select two objects with
a dark and light hue, and then apply blend. In the blend options, specify the number
of steps depending on how many steps
you would like. Now, expand the blend
object to divide the blend into distinct objects which
can be edited individually. To do that, select the Blend, go to Object, choose Blend, and select Expand and click on the Group icon in the
swatches panel to save the color group and you get the entire
color palette. Next thing we need
to know is how we can apply a blend to
another custom path. In order to do that, select both the path or
objects and go to Object, choose Blend and
select Replace Spine. This will update the new
path with the blend of it. You can edit the number
of steps or distance and even the orientation of
the objects along the path. If you want to reverse
the blend of it, go to Object, choose
Blend and Reverse Spine. Releasing a blended
object removes the new objects and restores
the original objects. Expanding a blended
object divides the blend into distinct objects, which can be edited individually
like any other object. This is another
amazing feature you find in Illustrator
if you are using the latest version as it
was introduced in 2021. This is the repeat tool where
illustrator lets you easily repeat objects and manage their styles with
a single click. All you need to do is
create the first object and choose a repeat type
from radial, grid or mirror. And Illustrator
will auto-generate the complete artwork for you. To create a radial repeat, select the Object
and choose Object, select Repeat and Radial. The object is repeated in a radial repeat type
with default options. By default, eight
instances are repeated. To change the repeat
instance count, select the repeated
artwork and click the instances control
on the canvas. Drag the controls on the
circle to change its size, drag the splitter on the circle to remove
some instances, drag from the corner to increase or decrease
the size of the repeat. To create a grid repeat, select the Object and
now go to Object, choose Repeat, and choose Grid. The object is repeated in a grid repeat with
default options. To modify the repeat, use the on Canvas controls, drag the handles on bottom and right to add more
rows and columns. Drag from the corner
to increase or decrease the size
of the grid repeat, drag the vertical and
horizontal slider to increase or decrease the
spacing in the grid. You can also change
the grid type to grid by row or column. To do that go to Object, choose Repeat, and
choose Repeat options, and in the window modify the
settings for grid repeat, click Okay to save. You can also use the
properties panel to edit the repeat options. To edit your artwork
in any repeat, double click on the
Object to enter isolation mode and you can
update the artwork here. Click on the Back to
exit isolation mode. Now for the mirror repeat, you just create the first half of the symmetrical artwork, select the Object,
and go to Object, choose Repeat, and
select Mirror. To edit, drag the
handles below or above to rotate or
transform the mirror part. You can also move the object
away to adjust the spacing, drag the symmetry
axis to control the angle and spacing
between the two artworks. Once finished, if you click
away and then click again, you do not see the
control handles. Both shapes are grouped together and move
as a single object. To edit them again, double
click on the artwork. If you want to edit only a specific shape or
object in the repeat pattern, use the expand option
to create a group of shapes to
independently edit them. However, you won't be able to edit the mirror repeat settings. In the next lesson,
we will learn about expand and
expand appearance.
20. Expand and Expand Appearance: Expanding objects
enables you to divide a single object into multiple objects that
make up its appearance. For example if you
expand a simple object, such as a circle with a solid
color fill and a stroke, the fill and stroke each
become a discrete object. If you expand more
complex circle, such as an object
with a pattern fill, the pattern is divided into all the distinct paths
that created it. We normally choose to expand an object when we want to modify the appearance and
other properties of specific elements within it. As once expanded, you cannot edit the effects and
attributes like before. Let's understand this
using few examples. Here, I have two sets of
strokes with 10 point weight, with different effects and
attributes applied to them. To see the path
in these strokes, click Command or Control Y to enter the outline
preview mode. As you can see, the path of
all the strokes is same. Now press Command or Control Y to return to view the
artwork in color. Let's expand the
first stroke which is a basic stroke
with 10 point weight. To do that, go to Object
and choose Expand. For the next stroke that has
a stroke profile applied, select its copy
and go to object. You will notice the
Expand option is dimmed. In this case, choose object, select Expand Appearance,
and now choose Expand. Repeat the same for rest of
the strokes which have brush, zigzag effect and pattern
brushes applied to them. Now, to view them in
the outline mode, press Command or Control Y and you will notice when
the stroke is editable, the outline path for
all of them is same. Whereas once
expanded, they become individual elements
which can now be edited separately but they lose the stroke
editing feature. Similarly here I
have two sets of objects that are filled
with gradient and pattern. Select the gradient copy
and go to Object, Expand. In the window you can
specify the number of objects you would like to
have in expanded object. If I select 10, it will make the gradient
effect with 10 steps. If I change it to 20, it will change accordingly. Repeat the same for
the pattern fill. Now you get to edit these individual elements but cannot revert the action back. I would always recommend
to keep a copy of the objects or layer
before expanding. In the next lesson,
we will learn about compound path and clipping mask
21. Compound Path and Clipping Mask: Compound path allows you to take multiple objects and
compound them into one path without affecting the freedom of editing
them separately as well. You can find this
in the Object menu, and the keyboard shortcut for compound path is
Command or Control 8. Let's try to understand
this using an example. I want to create this flower with the same gradient effect. To do that, I'll
create the shape of one petal using the
shape builder tool. Select the Rotate tool and while holding "Alt" or "Option key", click on the center of the circle to move the
registration point. In the Rotate tool
option window, enter the angle
and choose "Copy". Press "Command or Control
D" to repeat the action. Another way to create this is by using the radial
repeat feature. Select the petal shape. Go to Object, choose
"Repeat Radial". Adjust the on canvas controls
to create the artwork. Once completed, expand to convert it into
individual shapes. Once the drawing is ready, you need to add the
gradient to the petal. I have the gradient swatch
saved in the panel, so I'll just click
on the swatch. To get this radial
gradient effect I need to edit individually
gradient setting, but the easier way is to convert the petals into a compound path. To do that, select the shapes. Press "Command or Control
8" on your keyboard. Even though there
are multiple shapes, with compound path it
works as one single path. The best thing is you
can revert it back by release compound path in the Object menu and edit them
individually like before. You can create the same effect with the text objects also. One way to add gradients to your texts is by expanding them. When I apply a gradient each character has its
own gradient setting, but once I've converted into a compound path I can use one gradient
over the entire text. Another great use of compound path is while
creating clipping mask. What is a clipping mask? A clipping mask is a shape that masks any object below it, so only what's inside the
clipping path is visible. Only vector objects can be
clipping mask, however, any artwork can be
masked like an object, image, or a pattern. You can find this feature
in the Object menu, and the keyboard shortcut for clipping mask is
Command or Control 7. A few things to keep in mind when you are
creating a clipping mask. The objects that
you mask are moved into a clipping mask group
in the Layers panel. If you use a group or layer
to create a clipping mask, the first object in the layer
or group masks everything. Regardless of its
previous attributes, a clipping mask changes to an object with no
fill or stroke. In case your shape is
on the same layer, make sure to bring it to front before creating
the clipping mask. Let's try it with
the raster image. Select the two and press "Command or Control
7" on your keyboard. You can use any vector
shape as a mask. To edit your contents
in a clipping mask, go to Object, choose
"Clipping Mask", and select "Edit Contents", or double-click on the object
to enter isolation mode. Double-click outside the
object to exit isolation mode. To release the clipping mask, use the Object menu and
select "Clipping Mask", choose "Release", or use the Control panel or
Properties panel command. This is when you have a
single shape to use as mask. I will use a text shape
as a mask this time. Expand the text to use as shape. With the shape on top
along with the image, when I use clipping
mask nothing happens. It's because only
the object that is on top masks everything. To make them as one, we use the compound
path command. Select the text shape, and press "Command
or Control 8" on your keyboard to convert
it into a compound path. Now Select the shape
and image and press "Command or Control 7" to
create the clipping mask. You will see all the shapes have the image mask inside them. You can edit or release the
mask using the same settings. Another thing I
would like to share is the three drawing
mode options that you see on the toolbar right below the color
fill and stroke. By default, you have
Draw Normal selected. Next option is Draw Behind. When this is selected you
draw or select a shape, and then whatever you draw
will go behind that object. Everything will still be there, but it will be like a mask. The third option is Draw Inside where do you
draw or select a shape, and then click on this option. Now whatever you draw will
stay inside the shape. It is a clipping
mask and you can edit it like any
other clipping mask. In the next lesson we
will discuss about working with raster files
and images in Illustrator.
22. Illustrator for Raster Images: To add a raster image
to our document, we need to place it
on the art board. To do that, go to file, choose place, and
select your file. Now you can either
drag over an area and the image will be
placed within that area. Or you can just click
on the artboard and then resize using
the free transform. You can place multiple images at a time on one or
multiple art boards. Once we have the image
placed we can use the bounding box or the
transform tools to scale, reflect, rotate, and duplicate. We can also create a
clipping mask with this image using a
vector shape on top. To do that, select the shape and image and click Command or Control 7
on your keyboard. Now with the image selected, let's check the properties panel and the control panel settings. Here we can adjust the
opacity of the image, and by clicking on the
opacity panel we can also choose a blending mode
from this drop-down menu. Same as we do in Photoshop. When you add image to
your document by using the place command it can
be linked or embedded. You can use the control
panel command or the properties panel
command to embed an image. In simple words, when you embed images in
Illustrator file, the image file is stored
within the document. Whereas if you share a file without embedding the
image to other device, it will show that the
file is missing image. Another option is to link
the image to your document. That way you can
update the image using any editing program and it will be updated automatically in your Illustrator document. Use the links panel to
determine if the file is linked or embedded or
change its status. To display the links panel, go to Window and choose links. You can click here
to crop the image. Drag the crop marks and click "Apply" to update the changes. Another very commonly
used feature in Illustrator is live trace, where you can convert a raster file into
editable vector file. To view the live trace settings, go to Window and
select Image Trace. Illustrator offers a range
of presets to choose from. Like high fidelity photo, logo, sketched art, line art and more. You can choose depending
on your project. When you click on
view, you get to see the selected view of tracing result over the source image. With mode, you specify a color mode for
the tracing result. When you choose color
mode you can also choose the palette settings and
decide the number of colors. For gray-scale and
black and white option. You can choose the
grays and threshold. In the advanced control, you can add just
the path settings, which controls the
distance between the traced shape and the
original pixel shape. Corner specifies the
emphasis on corners. Higher values result
in more corners. For noise setting, keep
it higher value for high resolution image and
lower value for low res files. Method specifies a
method for tracing. You can choose
abutting or overlapping. Choosing fills will
create filled region in the tracing result and strokes will create Stroke
Path in the tracing result. Snap curves to lines specifies if slightly curved
lines are replaced with straight lines and if
lines near to zero or 90 degree are snap to
absolute zero or 90 degree. You can choose this option
for geometric artwork. Or if the shapes in your
reference image are slightly rotated, Ignore white. Choose this if you want, the white fills to be
replaced with no fills. Click preview to see the result. When you are satisfied with
the results of tracing, you can convert the
tracing objects to path. To do that, click "Expand". The resulting parts are grouped
together to ungroup press Shift Command G or Shift
Control G on your keyboard. To simplify paths by removing excess anchor point, choose
object path, and simplify. Few more things that you can
do with the raster images. Please note that these artworks won't be editable
as vector shapes, but you can save or
export them as JPEG, PNG, PSD, or other
raster file formats. You can add raster images to pattern swatches and also edit them using the
pattern option tool. We will discuss this in
detail in my next class, where we will focus on pattern
design in Illustrator. You can fill any vector
shape with this swatch. You can also add them as
brushes and the brushes panel. Use any raster image or motif
to create a scatter brush, art brush or pattern brush. To edit the settings
double-click on the brush and here I can also adjust the
spacing and other details. Apply to an existing stroke or create a new stroke
with the brush selected. These are some of the ways I use raster images in
my design process. Even though Illustrator is
a vector graphic program, I feel it's also really helpful
for raster image editing. In the next lesson, which
is also the final lesson, we will learn how to save export and export files
for screen in Illustrator.
23. Save, Export and Export for Screens: To save a file in Illustrator,
choose File Save. If you're saving your
file for the first time, or if you want to update
your file, with the changes. Choose save as if you want
to the file name or format. Choose save a copy
if you want to make a copy of the
existing file. Choose the location
from saved on your computer or save
to creative cloud. Saving on creative cloud
gives many benefits, but you need to have a creative
cloud account to use it. By default, auto save or auto-recovery is enabled
for all Illustrator files. To manage auto-save settings,
navigate to preferences. File handling and here you can check or
edit the settings. Illustrator saves files
in its native format, AI. Another common format for
saving your files is PDF. In the window, enter your
file name and location. in the settings window select high-quality print
and you can choose to preserve illustrator
editing capabilities but this will increase
the file size. Whereas if you turn it off, the file size reduces
a lot but you won't be able to edit the file
in Illustrator anymore. Though the file quality
remains same and you can use these for email
attachments and more. Here's a quick
comparison between the file size for both options. There are few more
formats like EPS, AIT, and SVG, which are also editable, and sometimes
clients for printers might ask for a
particular format. You can choose them based
on your requirement. Now let's see how to export
files in Illustrator. The simplest way to export
a file is go to file, choose Export As and it will
give you a few options. You can edit the file name here, choose an existing
folder location, or create a new folder here. Next, select the format
from the drop-down menu. Most common formats
for exporting files are PNG and JPEG, but you can choose any
other format from the list. Below, we have few more options. Select use Artboard
if you want only what's inside the
artboard to be exported. Also, if you do not
select this option, everything that is on the Canvas will be exported as one image. Let's see this using
a quick example. I have a document here with few art books on
three artboards. Some of the artwork is
extending out of the artboard. Now when I choose Export as
PNG and keep Use Artboard deselected and choose Export. You can see in the preview, all the three artboards
are included in one image along with
the extended parts. Now when I choose
use Artboard option, it enables the other
three settings. I can choose all to export
all the artboards as individual files or I can choose a range of artboards and it will only export
those Artboards. Suffix is the text that will be added in the filename here. Next in the PNG options, you can select the
resolution from the list. The next option
is anti-aliasing, which is used to
smoothen jagged edges. Here you can choose
Type Optimized if your artwork
contains a lot of text or art optimized that applies to all
objects and text. Below, you can choose
the background color from transparent,
white, or black. Check the preview here and
click Okay to export. Now let's export
the files as JPEG. Go to File, choose Export As, and choose JPEG from
the drop-down menu. Select the Artboard
options as before. In the JPEG option, you can choose image, color model, and quality from low, medium, high, or maximum. Below you can choose the
compression methods. Baseline standard recognizes
JPEG to most web browsers, and it's the basic
and standard one. Baseline optimized optimizes
the color quality of the image and produces a
slightly smaller file size. Embed ICC profile helps view your file in other applications. Click Okay to save or
Cancel to discard. The export for screens workflow
is a new way to generate assets of different sizes and
file formats in one action. When you choose
export for screens, two tabs are available,
artboard and assets. Once you select artboard, you get to choose from the
artboards available to export. Click an Artboard to
select or deselect it. Hold shift and click to
make multiple selections. Below you can choose
the thumbnail view and clear selection. On the right-hand side, you can choose artboard by
selecting all or a range. Click here to select Bleed. You can also choose
full document to export the entire
document on one page. Next, you can select
the folder location here and choose to open
location after export. In case there are
multiple files, you can make sub-folders
based on scale or format. The next option, export
as PDF gets enabled, once you choose the PDF
format from this menu. You can choose to
export your document as a single file
or multiple files. Next, in the format section, choose the scale, suffix, that is the texts added after the file name and the format. Now the best thing
here is that you can add multiple scales with different suffix
and file formats and it will all the
exported at once. Once we click Export, the folder will
open automatically. Since we selected the open
location after Export option. Next is the Assets tab. This is useful when you
have multiple objects, such as icons, logos, images, and more that you
use frequently. To export assets, go to File, select Export for Screens, and now click on the Assets tab. It says drag artwork to the Assets panel to have
it ready for export. Click on the Assests panel, you can also find this
in the Window menu. I have a few shapes here, which I would like
to export as assets. Select the shapes one at
a time or collectively, and drag to the
asset export panel. We can either enter
the other details like scales, suffix, and format in this
window or go to File, select Export for Screens, and adjust the settings. Click Export and check the
assets files in the folder. In the next lesson, I'll be sharing a visual
demonstration of creating an artwork in Illustrator
using a simple sketch. Do, join me if you
are looking for some guidance or inspiration
for your class project. Thank you so much for your time and I'll see you in
the next lesson.
25. Final Thoughts: Wow. You made it to the end. Honestly, I was worried that I made the video a little long. But this program has so much to offer that I wanted to
share as much as I could. If you have any questions, please feel free to drop them
in the discussions page of the class and I'll be
more than happy to help. If you like the class, please leave a review
and follow me on Skillshare to get updates
on my new classes. I would love to see
what you create. So do upload your projects
in the students' gallery. You can also post them on Instagram and don't
forget to tag me @geetanjali.b so I can like
and comment on your designs. Now what's next? If you liked working with
Illustrator even a bit, I would recommend just keep practicing and you will
become a pro in few weeks. You can also join me in my next class where we
will discuss about how to create surface
pattern designs in Illustrator using
different ways. I'll also share my own workflow. Once again, thank you
so much for joining me and I hope to see you
again in my next class. Till then, happy creating.