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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

Alternative Office

As software models emerge, the scenery of software changes. Only forces this strong could dethrone a dominant software suite like Microsoft Office. Both web-based services and Open Source software have produced the following free office suites.

Last week we looked at a couple free AJAX services, Writely and NumSum that respectively replace Word and Excel. But these are feature-limited and experimental. This week’s picks come with office-sized feature sets.

ThinkFree Office Online

ThinkFree has years of experience in office applications. In its newest version, ThinkFree has taken its Java-based alternative to the web. This new online office suite opens, edits and saves Word, Excel and PowerPoint files. In addition to supporting all kinds of Office features, like columns, advanced formatting, graphics and more. ThinkFree Office Online also supports web-based presentation via document embedding in your blog.

thinkfreeonline Alternative Office

Whats more, your files and the software reside online and are accessible from any computer with a browser and Java. The web-based aspect of the suite makes it convenient, but also requires patience as the software loads into your browser. The initial load is longer than subsequent ones. But unlike many Java applications, its performance on the Mac is more than adequate for regular use. While ThinkFree’s beta professes limited support for Mac, Linux, Firefox and Safari I found it to work well on both Mac browsers, Safari working better.

OpenOffice.org 2

This Open Source project is in its fifth year of adapting Sun’s Star Office into a Microsoft Office replacement. While there have been some early criticisms of the new version’s speed, I have found it the best Office replacement yet. In testing the suite I found OpenOffice to handle complex features like conditional formatting, tables, columns and embedded graphics.

OpenOffice 2 for Mac is available now as an Advanced Build, a prelease version that is described as stable. In my testing I did not experience any troubles. This new build includes the complete suite and interface – making it the first OpenOffice version for Mac with full feature parity. This includes Base, the Access-like database tool and Math (used for scientific formulas) and Draw in addition to the standard Writer, Calc and Impress.

openoffice2 Alternative Office

All that functionality comes at a price – more than 300 megabytes. The suite also requires and uses the X11 windowing system: a free install from Apple. But, this new version comes with valuable functionality and performance improvements. OpenOffice provides Mac users with a very compelling option. Mac Office has been incomplete in comparison to its Windows companion. With a full-featured replacement, there’s no reason to upgrade Office for Mac.

So, whatever your style of word processing and spreadsheeting – there is a compelling, complete and modern alternative to Microsoft Office. Isn’t freeware great?

Brian

Browser Classics

Long before Apple took the Jaguar on Safari, Cyberdog brought the web to Mac. This week we’ll look of the original free web browsers.

NCSA Mosaic 2.0

The great-grand-daddy of all browsers, this is where the web began ten years ago. Believe it or not, Mosaic is still downloadable and functional, more or less.

Netscape Communicator 4.8

As the story goes, Mosaic’s creators go commercial and create Netscape. Before abandoning the original code in favor of the new Gecko rendering engine in version 6, communicator matured to the still loved version 4.8.

Cyberdog 2.0

My personal favorite and Apple’s first true web browser, Cyberdog integrated mail, news and the web built with customizable OpenDoc technology. Though Apple long ago left Cyberdog for the pound, you can still download it and it maintains a following on the web.

Internet Explorer

Well, I was about to go looking for an old downloadable version of IE, but I realized that it hasn’t changed all that much, so you can fire up 5.1 and have about the same experience as with the classic version.

The faces have changed, but the game is the same. With Safari, Camino and Internet Explorer vying for control of the web, it’s worth revisiting the past to see what progress we’ve made in 10 years.

Brian