Adobe Illustrator CC For Dummies
eBook - ePub

Adobe Illustrator CC For Dummies

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Adobe Illustrator CC For Dummies

About this book

Get to know your digital drawing board

Adobe Illustrator CC offers a vibrant tool for creating drawings and illustrations in a digital environment. It takes some practice to get a feel for the digital pens, pencils, paintbrushes, and erasers, though. Adobe Illustrator CC For Dummies offers the guidance you need to turn your ideas into real drawings.

Written by an Illustrator trainer and expert, this book walks those new to the tool through the basics of drawing, editing, and applying the unique tools found in this popular program.

  • Create illustrations using simple shapes
  • Touch up images using pen, pencil, and brush tools
  • Import your illustrations into other graphic apps
  • Apply special effects and add type

This book is essential reading for new and beginning illustrators who are either adopting a digital tool for the first time, switching from an existing tool to Illustrator, or adding Illustrator know-how to existing Adobe knowledge.

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Yes, you can access Adobe Illustrator CC For Dummies by David Karlins in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Computer Science & Desktop Applications. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Part 1

Creating, Navigating, and Saving Projects

IN THIS PART …
Getting started with Illustrator, navigating the interface, and creating artwork
Creating, saving, and printing Illustrator documents and objects
Adding artwork from other sources — including your scanner, photos, and sketches from Adobe Draw or other apps
Drawing, arranging, and creating artwork using lines and shapes
Organizing larger projects into layers, and applying styling to entire layers
Chapter 1

Navigating Illustrator’s Interface

IN THIS CHAPTER
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Launching and configuring Illustrator
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Using and customizing the toolbar
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Accessing and organizing panels
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Using the Control panel and the Properties panel
Adobe Illustrator’s interface can seem complicated, confusing, and sometimes redundant. Here’s why: It is complicated, confusing, and sometimes redundant. But there are good reasons why.
One reason is that people use Illustrator in so many different ways. Illustrator really is a jack-of-all-trades, and so the folks who develop it need to provide alternative pathways to get things done. For example, an artist designing a logo and an engineer sketching an electrical system have different needs and likely different approaches to drawing, and demand different ways to access Illustrator’s features.
The second reason why Illustrator’s interface is daunting is that there's so much in this application! A quick perusal of this book's Table of Contents will give you a sense of how many different things Illustrator is used for.
Finally, and perhaps ironically, some of the complexity of Illustrator’s interface comes from the very complexity of the app. The hard-working and creative team of developers who make Illustrator powerful and contemporary have their finger on the pulse of users like you! And as new generations of illustrators enter the Adobe Illustrator community, the development team endeavors to provide different alternatives to make the interface more inviting and accessible. For example, Illustrator’s toolbar now contains more than 80 tools. Displaying all those tools would make the entire set overwhelming and inaccessible, so Illustrator provides a basic version of the toolbar with a small subset of tools. This approach makes life easier if you need one of those tools but more complex if you need a tool that was left out of the basic box.
All that said, relax! In this chapter, I provide a guide to the key features in Illustrator and how to access them.

Surveying the Illustrator Universe

In the bulk of this book, I focus on documenting how to get things done: for example, how to create, save and print illustrations (Chapter 2); how to draw lines and shapes (Chapter 4); and how to select and assign color (Chapter 11). The book is non-linear, so you’re invited to jump to just what you need. If you’re like me, you want to find out how to solve a problem, not understand how something works — at least at first. Other people, with more orderly minds I suspect, like to immerse themselves in the how before they get to the what.
If you have started with this chapter, you might be just entering into the Illustrator universe with a rational impulse to find out how to navigate your way around an interface that includes over 80 tools, hundreds of menu options, and at least two distinct but significantly overlapping options for accessing the most commonly used features: the Control panel and the Properties panel. These two panels provide similar sets of options, and which panel you use is really a matter of which one you find more comfortable to work with.
My mission in this opening chapter is not to present encyclopedic documentation of everything in the byzantine Illustrator interface. Instead, I provide a basic guide to where to find what, along with a curated documentation of features you will almost certainly need.

Launching Illustrator

Although people use Illustrator in different ways, a large section of designs travel through a few workflows. When you launch Illustrator, the opening home screen provides access to these frequently traveled express lanes to get you on your way:
  • Learn tab: The Learn tab, shown in Figure 1-1, provides access to a set of helpful video tutorials. You can watch them in sequence as a continuous learning experience, or choose a topic to help you solve a pressing challenge.
    Illustration of the Learn tab. Illustrator hands-on tutorials accessible from the home screen.
    FIGURE 1-1: Illustrator tutorials accessible from the home screen.
  • Start a New File Fast section: Because there are a number of frequently traveled pathways to creating files, the options in the Start a New File Fast section of the home screen allow easy access to basic settings for print and screen projects. These are not templates; they are packaged sets of properties such as units of measurements (points, pixels, inches, and more) and color modes (such as RGB or CMYK). Choosing one of these options can jump-start a project. I zoom in on these options in Chapter 2.
  • O...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Table of Contents
  3. Introduction
  4. Part 1: Creating, Navigating, and Saving Projects
  5. Part 2: Drawing and Editing Paths
  6. Part 3: Applying Color, Patterns, and Effects
  7. Part 4: Designing with Type
  8. Part 5: Handing off Graphics for Print and Screen Design
  9. Part 6: The Part of Tens
  10. Index
  11. About the Author
  12. Connect with Dummies
  13. End User License Agreement