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Disclaimer:

Most of the given Tutorials are taken from various sources on the Internet and I compiled some of them for you. Hope you understand. More are in the line.

I like to blog, I like to share my ideas, thinking and my works with friends. Here In this blog I will post my design works which i have tried in several design contest in online and offline.

Few Years ago, I just started to learn Illustrator as hobby. And to continue i learned myself illustrator and its some basics. Obviously I got a big volume of support from internet and my friends to learn this design techniques.

Here All the design I'll post is copyright protected as all the design done by myself.

Most of the Tutorials are collected from net as I got those while I was searching Tutorials for me and what I still search in the net. So respective tutorials are copyright protected as per their writer.

If anyone interested to get logo design or illustrator work he may contact me.

If anyone has anything to discuss about any tutorials, he/she may mail me to share and discuss on that.

Some of designs I have posted for my bids in http://www.99designs.com long ago.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

The Flare Tool


flareburst.jpg
What the heck is a Lens Flare tool doing in Illustrator? I always wondered that. The few times I’d selected the tool and actually drawn a flare, I couldn’t think of any reason I’d want to use it. I mean, it looks kind of cool, but I didn’t see a way to change the color or the arrangement of the circles. Turns out, I hadn’t dug deep enough. You really can do lots of cool things with the Flare tool.  Download this tutorial as a PDF.
 flaretool.jpg
Step 1: Draw a rectangle or square and fill it with black. You can put this square on its own layer, or lock it for now.

Step 2: Double-click the Flare tool. Enter the values shown here and click OK. Now, either click and drag out a flare, or click once on the artboard. If you do the latter, the flare will be drawn, and then the dialog box will pop up again so you can adjust the settings.

 flaretooloptions.jpg
 If you view the flare in Outline mode, you can see that it’s a set of concentric circles. You can select each circle with the Direct Selection (white arrow) tool, and inspect its fill, opacity and transparency mode. Place the flare on top of the black square, and it will look something like this:
flareoutline.jpg 



Step 3: Since the flare contains transparency, it will be affected by whatever color is underneath it. Try adding 100% cyan to the black and see what happens (if you prefer to work in RGB, you probably know how to make a blue-black. It hurts my head to think in RGB).  Also play around with different transparency modes and opacities.
 flareblue.jpg
Step 4:Now let’s get the Rotate tool involved. Squash your flare so that it forms an oval. Double-click the Rotate tool, enter 20° and click Copy. Press Cmd-D seven more times to make a complete circular shape:
rotateflare.jpg
Step 5: You can leave the shapes as they are, or if you want to re-color them, go to Object>Expand.You’ll end up with some very cool gradients that you can save for another project. Have fun!

flareexpand.jpg 

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