در طول این فصل ما این نوع آیکون کارخانه ای را طراحی می کنیم و ما قصد داریم این کار را انجام دهیم با استفاده از ابزارهای اساسی ترین ابزار Illustrator و ما آثار هنری را از ابتدا ساختیم به این معنی که شما قادر خواهید بود با من همراه شوید حتی اگر به فایل های تمرینی دسترسی نداشته باشید و من خوشحال خواهم شد اگر به دنبال آن هستید از آغاز تا انتها. در حال حاضر در این فیلم من به شما نشان خواهم داد که چگونه دستورالعمل ها را ایجاد کنید که راهنماهای غیر چاپ را به هم متصل می کنند داخل Illustrator بنابراین اولین کاری که می خواهید انجام دهید این است که به منوی File بروید و فرمان جدید را انتخاب کنید و البته شما می توانید کنترل + N را فشار دهید یا Command + N در Mac و سپس اجازه دهید فقط پیش برویم و این سند را فراخوانی کنیم راهنماهای کارخانه زیرا من با راهنمایی ها شروع می کنم. شما می خواهید مشخصات را به Basic RGB تنظیم کنید و چیز عالی در مورد Basic RGB این است که شما واقعا مرتکب چاپ و یا وب نیستید یا یک دستگاه یا هر چیز دیگری. شما فقط اساسی ترین نوع سند را می توانید بسازید داخل Illustrator به هر حال، مدل رنگ RGB کاملا مناسب چاپ محلی است. بنابراین هر سند که شما در حال چاپ روی آن هستید به چاپگر جوهر افشان یا لیزر باید زندگی خود را آغاز کند به عنوان یک فایل RGB اصلی. ما یک Artboard دیگر را نمی خواهیم و بگذارید بگوییم ما در نقاط کار می کنیم در این صورت پیش بروید و مقدار عرض را تنظیم کنید اگر می خواهید نتایج مشابهی با من داشته باشید، به 1،008، فقط به خوبی کار می کند و سپس مقدار ارتفاع را به 672 تنظیم کنید و دلیل اینکه من با این ارزشها رو بروم دلیل این است که آنها واقعا در داخل فیلم های ما کار می کنند. اگر دنیای پیشرفته را باز کنید، نگران نباشید هیچ چیز نیازی به تغییر اینجا نیست. فقط پیش بروید و روی Ok کلیک کنید برای ایجاد سند جدید خود
00:01:40 and I'm gonna go ahead and zoom in to 100%.
00:01:43 Alright, now go over to the Layers panel.
00:01:45 You should be able to see it
00:01:46 if you've set up your one-on-one workspace
00:01:48 as I advised in the previous chapter.
00:01:50 But if not if you can't see it
00:01:52 then go to the window menu and choose the Layers command
00:01:54 but do not choose the command
00:01:56 if it has a check mark in front of it
00:01:57 because that will actually hide the panel.
00:02:00 Alright, now what you wanna do is make this thumbnail bigger
00:02:03 by clicking on this flyout menu icon
00:02:05 in the upper right corner of the layers panel
00:02:07 and choosing panel options.
00:02:09 And then, as opposed to changing the Row Size to large,
00:02:14 which is still extremely dinky by the way,
00:02:16 go ahead and turn on Other and change it to
00:02:19 let's say 60 pixels and then click Okay and you can see
00:02:23 that we now end up with a much larger thumbnail
00:02:25 and that way we'll be able to better see what we're doing
00:02:28 inside each one of these layers.
00:02:30 Now let's go ahead and rename the layer
00:02:31 by double-clicking on it's present name,
00:02:33 that'll light it up like so
00:02:35 and then just go ahead and cal it guides
00:02:37 and press the Enter key or the Return key on a Mac
00:02:39 and the reason we're calling it guides
00:02:41 is because this is where we're gonna be putting
00:02:43 all of our non-printing guides inside of this artwork.
00:02:47 Alright, now the easiest way to create guides
00:02:49 is to go up to the View menu, choose Rulers,
00:02:52 and then choose Show Rulers
00:02:53 which has that fairly ubiquitous keyboard shortcut
00:02:56 of Control + R here on a PC or Command + R on a Mac
00:03:00 and that will bring up the rulers along the top
00:03:02 and left side of the screen.
00:03:04 Alright, now a few basic guidelines for creating guides
00:03:07 inside of Illustrator.
00:03:08 First you can go ahead and drag a guide out of a ruler
00:03:11 and then just drop it into place
00:03:13 and the same is true of creating a vertical guide as well,
00:03:16 you just drag it out of the vertical ruler.
00:03:18 Alright, now let's say
00:03:19 you want to be able to snap to these tick marks.
00:03:22 See these little tick marks inside of the rulers?
00:03:24 Then as you're dragging down on the guide,
00:03:28 for example from the horizontal ruler
00:03:30 at the top of the screen,
00:03:31 then go ahead and press the Shift key
00:03:33 and hold that Shift key down
00:03:35 and notice then you will snap from one tick mark to the next
00:03:39 and the same holds true
00:03:40 when you're creating a vertical guide,
00:03:42 you're gonna snap from one tick mark
00:03:44 along the horizontal ruler at the top of the screen
00:03:47 but you have to keep that shift key down
00:03:49 throughout the length of your drag.
00:03:52 Alright, here's one you might wanna know about.
00:03:53 I never take advantage of it, but it's one of your options.
00:03:56 As you're dragging out a vertical guide
00:03:58 if you press and hold the Alt key
00:04:00 or the Option key on the Mac
00:04:02 it'll change to a horizontal guide.
00:04:04 How about that?
00:04:05 And the same thing holds true
00:04:06 if you start off with the horizontal guide
00:04:08 if you press and hold the Alt or Option key
00:04:10 it'll turn into a vertical guide
00:04:12 but again only so long as you have that key down.
00:04:14 If I release the Alt or Option key,
00:04:16 I'm gonna return to a horizontal guide.
00:04:19 If you wanna create a guide at a specific location,
00:04:22 I'm gonna go ahead and zoom in by Control + Spacebar
00:04:26 or Command + Spacebar clicking like so
00:04:29 and notice now that I'm zoomed quite far in
00:04:32 to 3,200% right here so that I can see 369 and 372
00:04:38 and so forth along the top ruler.
00:04:40 You may be zoomed in to some other location
00:04:42 in your document, it doesn't really matter.
00:04:44 But let's say you want to create a guide right there,
00:04:47 well just go ahead and double-click on the ruler
00:04:49 in order to create a guide at that location.
00:04:52 If you want it to snap exactly to the nearest tick mark
00:04:55 then just go ahead and Shift + double-click
00:04:58 and notice even though I Shift + double-click
00:04:59 right about here I created a guide exactly at 372 points.
00:05:04 So again, that's a Shift + double-click on that ruler.
00:05:08 So in other words any time you have the Shift key down
00:05:10 you're going to snap to a specific location.
00:05:13 Alright, I'm gonna press Control + 0
00:05:15 or Command + 0 on the Mac to zoom all the way out
00:05:17 and you can see
00:05:18 that we have some guides very close to each other,
00:05:20 doesn't matter because we're gonna get rid of them
00:05:22 but I do wanna show you one more trick.
00:05:24 You can create two guides at the same time
00:05:27 by dragging from the intersection of the two rulers,
00:05:31 but you don't wanna just drag
00:05:32 because as you may recall that's gonna change the 0,0 point
00:05:36 inside of the document.
00:05:38 Instead you press the Control key
00:05:40 or the Command key on the Mac as you drag
00:05:43 and then you can drop two guides in place at the same time
00:05:46 which is gonna save you a lot of time
00:05:48 when creating center guides and here's how that works.
00:05:51 The first thing you wanna do is get rid of all this garbage
00:05:54 by going up to the View menu, choosing Guides,
00:05:56 and then choosing Clear Guides
00:05:58 and that'll get rid of all the guides you've created so far.
00:06:01 Then press the Control key or the Command key on the Mac
00:06:04 and then drag from the intersection of the two rulers
00:06:06 to lay down a couple of guides at a time.
00:06:09 Don't worry if they're in the center of the Artboard or not.
00:06:12 Just go ahead and drag 'em out there.
00:06:14 Then press Control + R or Command + R on the Mac
00:06:17 in order to hide the rulers
00:06:18 and now what I want you to do is go up to the View menu,
00:06:22 choose Guides, and choose Lock Guides to turn it off.
00:06:26 And now with your black arrow just go ahead
00:06:29 and partially drag around those two guides like so
00:06:31 to select them, at which point they'll appear blue,
00:06:33 then go up to the control panel
00:06:35 click on this Align icon right there,
00:06:38 make sure it's set to Align to Artboard
00:06:40 and then click on the two Center Align icons,
00:06:42 Horizontal Align Center and then Vertical Align Center
00:06:46 and now you have two guidelines that are exactly aligned
00:06:49 to the center of your document.
00:06:51 At which point you can go ahead and lock your guides again
00:06:53 by returning to the View menu, choosing Guides,
and then choosing Lock Guides to turn the command back on.
And that's how you create a new basic RGB document,
which is the most flexible kind of document you can create
inside of Illustrator as well as establish two guides
right through the center of your Artboard.