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Deke's Techniques 193: Drawing an ISOTYPE Couple in Love in Illustrator

Deke's Techniques 193: Drawing an ISOTYPE Couple in Love in Illustrator

Hey kids!

Remember the universal ISOTYPE symbols from last week? How could you forget, right? They're famous from airport bathrooms everywhere. I mean, just looking at them makes you wanna pee. And they have such sparkling personalities, it makes you wanna pee some more. Plus, Colleen devoted 17 blogs posts and a PhD treatise on the topic, culminating in this universal symbol for an airport bar. I know there's another pee joke in there, but I'm beginning to disgust myself.

Tangentially, did you know Valentine's Day is just 2 weeks and 2 days away? That hateful, horrible holiday. And these two, they have so much in common. So rounded and fingerless. He sports spandex, she wear that pretty cow-bell-shaped dress. And when they look at each other with their blank circular faces, you can see the sparks fly. Because you have eyes.

So I thought, let's put these two hotties in the same document and see what happens. And you know what, not to be a spoiler, but they fall in love. Not real, actual love, mind you, but pretend, stupid love, the kind you get when you edit vector-based path outlines in Illustrator. We even get to witness the man give his heart to the lady as a bunch of strokes. Which, frankly, is messed up.

And yet this all goes to a larger point: No one needs talent to draw anymore. You just need the Appearance panel.

Coming soon: How to render the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel using nothing but Illustrator strokes. And ISOTYPE people, of course. Speaking of which, what's the universal symbol for Adam touching God's finger, when they don't have any? And how does a rounded, fingerless, faceless, everythingless character invoke that cheerful old St. Bartholomew displaying his flayed skin? Because he's a gut buster.

This is gonna be tough. See, Michelangelo's peeps are always wandering around with their junk hanging out. And my lover's got no junk.

But you know, now that I think about it, I bet you can solve that problem with lots and lots of strokes. Inside Illustrator. Read more » 

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Deke's Techniques 191: Building a Universal ISOTYPE Man with Strokes in Illustrator

Deke's Techniques 191: Building a Universal ISOTYPE Man with Strokes in Illustrator

First, don't panic that I've suddenly skipped from episode 105, "Op Art Experiment 1a:Inflated Checkers," all the way up to 191 in a single week. You didn't miss 86 episodes in between. It's just an adjustment in the numbering convention. I previously counted the free videos (the ones posted on this site) and left out the ones that are only available to members of lynda.com. But given that it's a new year and Deke's Techiques is now officially in its third year, I decided to do the rational thing and catch up with the lynda.com numbering system. And so here we are.

Second, the topic of this week's video: How to create the universal pictographic man symbol in Illustrator. By which I mean, the one below:

The universal symbol/pictograph for man, explained

And the way we'll be creating this man is, dare I say, innovative. Rather than drawing him as a series of path outlines, either tediously with the pen tool (gawd!) or as a collection of rectangles and circles that you combine from the Pathfinder panel, I'll show you how to construct the guy from the Appearance panel by heaping on a series of strokes and a single fill.

Watch the video. And then, if you're in the mood for a step-by-step companion, see Colleen Wheeler's deliciously diagrammed post from yesterday. Many of you will be able to follow the directions just by looking at the figures. Read more » 

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Illustrator One-on-One CS6: Advanced Is Now Out at lynda.com

Oh goodness gravy, I have been remiss. Last Thursday, my newest video course, Illustrator CS6 One-on-One: Advanced, hit the virtual shelves of the lynda.com Online Training Library. And it's been the talk of the town. If you imagine this site is the town. And I'm the only one talking. But it's been popular so perhaps you'll want to listen up, even if I'm just yackin' up my own junk.

The course is 11 hours and 2 minutes long. Exactly 6 minutes shorter than my previous course, Illustrator CS6 One-on-One; Intermediate. Which makes it precisely 0.6% more powerful. (I did the math!) Please allow me to share my favorite three sample files from this inspiring and ultra-long but ultra-inspiring course.

Starting with, are you familiar with the concept of color harmonies? They play an essential role in the behavior of the exceedingly useful Color Guide panel and Recolor Artwork command. If this is news to you, check out Chapter 25, "The Color Guide Panel." Specifically the movie called "The 23 color harmony rules, diagrammed." In which I show you how each of the color harmonies works, in a real Lab color wheel so you can't help but understand, as pictured below:

Illustrator CS6 One-on-One: Advanced, Chapter 25, "The Color Guide Panels" Read more » 

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Deke's Techniques 89: Creating a Spirograph-Like Pattern in Illustrator

Deke's Techniques 89: Creating a Spirograph-Like Pattern in Illustrator

This week, I show you how to do something I already showed many of you how to do a long time ago. Only, now, I do so more judiciously and accompanied by a concrete example. (But, you know, gosh, that ancient 4-year-old episode of the now-dead dekePod with the Spirographs and junk holds up pretty well. I watched it before making this movie and---although I'm ashamed to admit it---I learned a thing or two.)

Today, I show you how to make a Spirograph-like pattern in Illustrator. No, not one. Three Spirograph-like patterns in all. Here's the official blow-by-blow description from lynda.com: Read more » 

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Deke's Techniques 076: Adding a Border to an Image in Illustrator

Deke's Techniques 76: Adding a Border to an Image in Illustrator

I sit in my home in Boulder, CO and it is hot as hell. 101° F. With my laptop on my lap, making it even warmer. The heat is all around me. Like a stench that I can't escape. Like an insect that won't leave. Like a quasi-friend that eludes my skills. Which is all good. Because, you see, this is the day that Deke's Techniques amps up from casual to serious. Today, this very day, I begin in earnest to kick some seriously vector-based ass.

Join me as I poke a toe into the waters of what will come. Specifically, today, I show you how to stroke a border around an imported image in Adobe Illustrator. Which, technically speaking, is impossible. And still, I show you how.

Here is the official description from lynda.com: Read more » 

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