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Zoomlines (avp 23 For Illustrator For Mac카테고리 없음 2020. 1. 28. 04:50
Design and create amazing works of art using Adobe Illustrator CC 2018, the powerful vector-based drawing program. This comprehensive training is the first in a series of three courses by industry pro Deke McClelland. Learn how to work with artboards; how to draw anything you can imagine with the Pen, Pencil, and Curvature tools; and how to start adding color to your artwork with swatches.
ZoomLines (AVP 23) for Illustrator. Mac OS X 10.3 Mac OS X 10.5 Intel Macintosh Mac OS X 10.6 Mac OS X 10.5 PPC Mac OS X 10.4 Intel Mac OS X 10.4 PPC Mac OS X 10.5 Mac OS X 10.7.
Deke also covers drawing shapes, adjusting strokes, formatting text, and painting digitally, with or without a tablet. Each chapter should leave you with a new set of skills—and a sense of accomplishment.
As Creative Cloud evolves, this course gets updated. Check back for new videos, new feature reviews, and new ways to work. Instructor.
An award-winning author and educator, Deke McClelland is a titan of image editing and graphic design. Deke McClelland is the author of more than 50 video courses on creative imaging, graphics, 3D, and design for the industry-leading lynda.com. One of the most award-winning writers in the business, Deke has written over 80 books translated into 24 languages, with more than 4 million copies in print. These have included The Photoshop Bible, several For Dummies books, and his own One-on-One series published under Deke Press. In his spare time, Deke runs dekeOnline , where he posts episodes of his popular lynda.com weekly series, Deke's Techniques. He lives in Boulder, Colorado with his two sons. By: Tony Harmer course.
1h 17m 3s. 3,311 viewers. Course Transcript - One of the more recent developments inside Illustrator CC is the program's natural tendency to zoom in on a selection. Notice that my black arrow tool is active up here at the top of the Tool Box. Let's say I select David's left eye by clicking on its outer rim right there just because it's a little easier to select that way. Now I press Control + here on a PC or Command + on the Mac, and notice I am now zooming in directly on that eye as opposed to the center of the document as occurs when nothing is selected. A lot of folks just absolutely love this behavior, but some of you may not.
So notice if I press Control + 0, or Command + 0 on the Mac, in order to fit the artboard on screen, and now let's say I want to zoom in a little more on this central artboard while keeping it centered. Well if I were to deselect the artwork just by clicking in an empty area, and then I were to press Control + or Command + on the Mac a couple of times, then everything would work out great. But the second I select that eye by clicking on it once again with the black arrow tool and I press Control - even or Command - on the Mac, I end up messing up my zoom. That can be a real problem at times. If that ends up irritating you, here's what you do. On a PC you go to the Edit menu.
On a Mac that's going to be the Illustrator CC menu. Then you drop down to the Preferences command, which isn't nearly so low on the menu on a Mac, and you choose Selection & Anchor Display from that submenu. Then notice this checkbox right here, Zoom to Selection, just go ahead and turn that guy off. You can always turn it on later if you like. Then click OK.
Now notice if I press Control + 0 or Command + 0 on the Mac, to center that central artboard, and then I press Control + or Command + on the Mac, even though the eye is selected, I'm still zooming in on the central portion of the artboard. That's how you zoom in or out on a selection or not inside the most recent edition of Illustrator CC. Practice while you learn with exercise files. Watch this course anytime, anywhere. Course Contents.
Zoomlines (avp 23 For Illustrator For Mac Free
Introduction Introduction. 1. Working with Documents 1. Working with Documents.
2. Working with Artboards 2. Working with Artboards.
3. Getting Around 3. Getting Around. 4.
Drawing Lines 4. Drawing Lines. 5. Drawing Shapes 5. Drawing Shapes.
6. Color and Swatches 6. Color and Swatches. 7. Strokes, Dashes, and Arrows 7.
Strokes, Dashes, and Arrows. 8. Creating and Formatting Type 8. Creating and Formatting Type. 9. Building Custom Paths 9. Building Custom Paths.
10. Using the Pencil Tool 10. Using the Pencil Tool. 11.
Painting and Erasing 11. Painting and Erasing. 12. Using the Curvature Tool 12. Using the Curvature Tool. 13.
Using the Pen Tool 13. Using the Pen Tool. 14. Drawing with Round Corners 14. Drawing with Round Corners. 15.
Making Screen Graphics 15. Making Screen Graphics. Conclusion Conclusion.