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Friday, March 27, 2015
Final Image Preview
Below is the final image that you’ll get from working through this tutorial. Sweet huh!
Here
is the original phone image from Engadget. I’m also a strong believer
of dissecting other people’s files to learn from them, so
here is the .ai file (AICS3).
Step 1 – The Pattern Shapes
Create a new document in Illustrator with a Basic RGB Document
Profile. 600px x 800px, 72ppi is good. Let’s start of with the patterned
background. Create a 25px x 25px square using the Rectangle tool (M).
Then using the Line Segment Tool ( \ ), click in the center of the
square, and while holding Opt+Shift, drag it to the corners to create a
perfect 45° angle that divides the square from corner to corner. Do the
same with the other side. Select everything and use the Divide
Pathfinder from the Pathfinder Palette. Here is what you should have so
far.
Step 2 – Finishing the Pattern
Now that each triangle within the square is a separate shape, we are
going to color them in using shades of gray to give the shape some
depth. The colors I am using are top: 20% black, left+right: 50% black,
bottom: 70% black. The stroke is still there and we don’t want that, so
select everything, hit ( X ) which switches focus between fill and
stroke and then ( / ) which removes color. Now using the Rectangle tool
(M) again, while holding Opt + Shift, drag from the center of the shape
to just outside of it. Then hit Cmd + Shift + ( [ ) to send it to back.
Give that square a 30% black. Copy that shape, paste to back (Cmd + B),
make sure the fill and stroke is set to none, select the entire shape,
and drag it into the swatches palette. this creates a pattern swatch
that you can use. If you’re having weird issues, make sure the no-fill
no-stroke square is all the way in the back.
Step 3 – The Background
If the pattern looks good, you can delete the original shapes or drag
it off the artboard to the side. (if you do delete it but find out
later that you need it again, just drag the swatch from the Swatches
palette into the artboard to get your original editable pattern shape)
Now create a large rectangle that fills up the artboard and fill it with
your brand spankin’ new pattern. If all went well, it should look like
one of those crazy studded belts you see those heavy metal rockers
wearing. Copy the background shape and paste in front (Cmd + F). Fill it
with a radial gradient and set the transparency to Multiply. I used
R33/G188/B252 for the inner color and R0/G82/B138 for the outer color.
Using the Gradient tool (G), give the background an effect of being lit
closer to the top. This gives the entire background a cool, very
editable color cast. It’s handy to use this method instead of coloring
the actual pattern shapes blue because now if i wanted to change the
color from blue to orange or to even a gradient mix of colors, i can
easily do that just by changing the color of this shape. I’ve done this
many times when having to create multiple icons of the same design but
with different colors and trust me, it saves you hours of work.
Step 4 – The Beam
This is the fun part. Zoom way in to your background (best keyboard
shortcuts ever? Cmd+Spacebar+Click to zoom in and Cmd+Opt+Spacebar+Click
to zoom out) and create a rectangle that covers maybe 12 or so “studs.”
Check the pic below if that doesn’t make sense. Make sure the rectangle
perfectly covers the studs to the edges. Give the shape a Linear
Gradient from a nice orange (R251/G164/B25) to black (R0/G0/B0) and set
the transparency to Screen. Use the Gradient Tool and drag from the top
of the shape to the bottom to give it a nice fade effect as if it was
moving upwards and leaving a trail of light.
Step 5 – The Light
Create a 75px circle with the same orange-to-black gradient and place
it in the center of the top square of our bream of light. Set the
gradient to radial and set the Transparency to Screen. Now go to Effect
> Blur > Gaussian Blur and give it a 10px blur. Copy the shape and
paste it in Front (Cmd+F). Using the Selection Tool (V) while holding
Opt+Shift, drag one of the corners of the selection box in to shrink the
copied circle a bit. Copy and Paste that one in front, and shrink a
little more again. You should have 3 circles now. This will give us a
nice light source that is super bright in the middle, but fades nicely.
Step 6
Copy the beam and light shapes, move them around, change the colors,
and you have yourself an awesome google phone styled design!
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