adobe illustrator

Adobe Illustrator Tip– Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

By: Rick Yaeger


gearfinal Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

One the features I find myself using the most in Adobe Illustrator is its Pathfinder tools. This week I’m going to show you a one of the ways you can use the Pathfinder. I will also be making use of the Star tool in a way that you may not have thought of before — to make gears.

Why would you want to make gears? I don’t know. Maybe you need to need to make some cold war era industrial looking propaganda posters. Maybe you never got over that gear fad that caught on in the early 90′s. Who knows. It’s not important. This tutorial is more about showing a few techniques that you might find useful in other situations while giving you a simple example of those techniques in action.

Step 1: Establishing a center point.

Easy enough. Make sure the rulers are visible (Command-R if they are not) and drag one vertical and one horizontal guide into the approximate middle of the page.

guides Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

Step 2: Draw a star.

First, choose the Star tool from the Tools palette. Set your stroke color to black and your fill color to "none". Place your cursor on the guides where they intersect, click and hold the mouse button as you drag away from the center point. You will notice that the Star tool chooses the number of points for the star without asking you. Press the up arrow to increase the number of points and the down arrow to decrease — remember to keep that mouse button held. I have chosen to go with a ten pointed star. I find that stars of six or more points seem to make better looking gears. I also find that stars with longer spikes are more conducive to gear making. In order to lengthen the spikes on your star, drag the mouse somewhat close to the center point so that the inner points of the star are closer to each other, then hold down the Command key and drag the cursor away from the center point thus lengthening the spikes on your star. Don’t go too far with lengthening the spikes — we’re making a gear, not a spur.

Step 3: Circles.

Now you’ll need to choose the Circle / Ellipse tool. Again place your cursor on the guides where they intersect, but hold down the Option and Shift keys and click and hold the mouse button as you drag away from the center point — this will draw perfect circles dead center. You need to make three circles: one that should fit inside your star shape without overlapping any of the lines that make the star, and two more that should end up outside the inner points but inside the outer points while not being too close to each other. Confused? Hopefully this diagram will help.

shapes Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

Step 4: The hard part is over… on to the Pathfinder!

Under the Window Menu, chose "Show Pathfinder." Select your creation and click the Divide button in the Pathfinder window. You have just made your four shapes into more than a dozen that are Grouped. Go ahead and Ungroup them (Command-Shift-G).

shapeselected Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.pathfinder Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

Next you will need to select and delete each and every one of those shapes that was created between the spikes of your star and your two larger circles (see the diagram below).

deletegaps Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

Are you seeing it yet? Don’t worry, you will. Now delete the tips of the spikes and the innermost circle. (See diagram) You may become confused while trying to delete the innermost circle since once you delete it, the outline will remain. Don’t worry, that is exactly what is supposed to happen.

deletepoints Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

Step 5: Almost there

What you are left with might look somewhat gear-like — it had better because we are pretty much done. Select the entire creation and click the "Add to shape area" button. Then click the "Expand" button. (If you are using a version of Adobe Illustrator that predates this version of the Pathfinder, simply click the "Unite" button)

gearselected Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

pathfinder Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

gearunite Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

Now just switch your fill color to black and your stroke color to none and marvel at your creation. If your creation isn’t that marvelous, marvel at my creation for a while and then try again. There are so many variables involved in this procedure that the possibilities are nearly endless. Unfortunately, with that many possibilities, the likelihood of creating a goofy looking gear is pretty high. Keep trying.

gearfinal Adobe Illustrator Tip   Simple Gears using Pathfinder and the Star tool.

Read other Graphics Tips of the Week

QuarkXPress- No Wow! to be had

By: Rick Yaeger

Looking across the spines of the books on the shelf in the Mac section at my local bookstore I see numerous volumes on various graphics applications. There’s Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator, Macromedia Freehand and Procreate Painter among others. Thanks mainly to Peachpit Press, I also see one particular word that seems be a favorite in the titles of these books ó “Wow!” ….Photoshop has a Wow! Book, Illustrator has a Wow! Book, Painter has a Wow! Book…there seems to be a lot of reason to be Wow’d these days.

We all want to be Wow’d and it just stands to reason that we might also like to Wow others ó if we didn’t, Peachpit wouldn’t keep making these books. Recently I have started offering my own graphics techniques here at MacMerc in our Graphics Tip of the Week section. I had hoped to offer a tutorial every week that would Wow our readers to some degree. Rather than limit myself to one application, I decided to just take the ideas as they came regardless of which application they utilized ó let the creative spirit flow. It soon became apparent that certain applications, like Photoshop and Illustrator, lent themselves to Wowing people, while others did not. QuarkXPress is without the ability to Wow ó it may try but it doesn’t have it in it.

“So what!?” you say “QuarkXPress is just a layout program. It’s not supposed to be exciting. It is there to do the job of laying out and it does it just fine.” Quite true. Perhaps QuarkXPress is secure enough that it feels no reason to draw attention to itself with all the flashiness that Illustrator or Photoshop use. It’s just not that needy.

But this is the graphics industry after all. An industry whose very nature is to be flashy and call attention to something in some way and that is exactly why Freehand and Canvas, among others, have been equipped with the ability to Wow. They also do the job of laying out and no Mac forum is complete without a thread consisting of various diehard users of various diehard applications extolling the virtues of their app of choice over the shortcomings of the industry standard, QuarkXPress.

With Quark, the Wow does not come standard. Many Wow-inspiring features that come standard in most competing applications, are either unavailable for QuarkXPress users or can only be utilized with the help of third party XTensions that, while they are quite well made and useful, really should not come as an extra cost to consumers who have already paid for Quark’s hefty $800 price tag.

Another issue that is often brought up is that QuarkXPress is not conducive to creative expression, that its interface is clunky, non-intuitive and “old” ñ it sucks the Wow right out of you. Many have pointed to InDesign and its familiar, standard Adobe interface as the “Quark killer” and have predicted a coup d’Ètat that will unseat XPress on the throne of industry standards and replace it with the day’s favorite.

Quark has long been criticized for being slow to release updates and lackluster when it does. For instance, it wasn’t until the late 90′s that Quark introduced the ability to enter type on a curve in version 4.0 and now, years after that addition to the program, many users have returned to Illustrator to achieve that same affect the same way they did in version 3. One has to wonder if the sparse new features of QuarkXPress 5.0 will soon lose what little novelty they have and be similarly ignored.

Users have felt disregarded when they contacted Quark with feature requests and betrayed when Quark not only disregarded their ideas but took the page layout application in directions few had need for. A prime example of this is QuarkXPress 5′s ability to translate documents built for print into HTML ó basically allowing a Wowless print piece to become a Wowless web site. The addition of this feature has caused more than a few diehard QuarkXPress users to shake their head in confusion. “Why do I want this and why should I have to pay for it?”

Ultimately, Quark’s own lack of customer appreciation and customer service and its failure to innovate, much less keep up, may have put the company and its flagship product in the “catch-up” position against Adobe’s upstart, InDesign. We may be shocked to find that Adobe InDesign isn’t as much the “QuarkXPress killer” it was touted as being, since it may be revealed in the last few pages of this murder mystery that Quark itself is holding the smoking gun over the bleeding XPress and muttering in disbelief, “I didn’t see THAT coming…wow!”

Are You Wow’d by QuarkXPress?vote here

And don’t forget to speak out in the Forums

Adobe loads their site up a bunch of CS4 demos

adobeCS4 20080923 181530 Adobe loads their site up a bunch of CS4 demosHave you updated to Adobe Creative Suite 4 yet? Yeah, me neither. Who has that kind of scratch laying around in this economy?

In the meantime, Adobe has posted a few CS4 demos to get you hooked on these apps while you save up to purchase them.

And if you’d rather your postal carrier deliver your CS4 demos rather than downloading them yourself, Adobe offers trial DVDs of both the Adobe Creative Suite 4 Design Premium (USD$10.99) and the Adobe Creative Suite 4 Master Collection (USD$15.99).

Note: