atlantagerma.blogg.se

Adobe illustrator cs6 logo
Adobe illustrator cs6 logo






adobe illustrator cs6 logo
  1. Adobe illustrator cs6 logo upgrade#
  2. Adobe illustrator cs6 logo professional#
  3. Adobe illustrator cs6 logo windows#

All this is about making things a little quicker for the user - and the interface improvements are very welcome.

adobe illustrator cs6 logo

And finally, when you tear off hidden tools you can now arrange them vertically to save a bit of desktop real estate - and dock them either like this or horizontally. In addition, the Control panel has been made a little more consistent when displaying content-sensitive information relating to tools and objects. The Transform panel also gets a Scale Strokes & Effects checkbox rather than it being tucked away in the Scale dialog. We'll never complain about better text controls. There's also new buttons for All Caps, Small Caps, Superscript and Subscript towards the bottom of the panel.

Adobe illustrator cs6 logo windows#

The expandable sampling area in the Color panel is a welcome addition - giving you a larger area from which to sample colours and create swatches The Character panelĪnd there's more! The Character panel has had a minor tweak to enable you to cycle through fonts - seeing a preview on the artboard if the text is selected - using the arrow keys (it was available in Windows up until this release, but now is across both platforms). It's hard not to like the new interface - it feels like a modern step forward for the application. In fact, everything looks a bit more detailed, a bit more refined (and the Tools panel, in our opinion still looks better as one column). The main Tools panel also looks more refined, with redesigned tool icons.

adobe illustrator cs6 logo

As is the option to change the Canvas colour (the area around the artboard) to match the user interface or keep it as white as in previous releases.

Adobe illustrator cs6 logo upgrade#

OK, it's not going to set the world on fire and get users queuing up to upgrade or sign up for Creative Cloud Membership, but it's a nice detail. Interface brightnessĪs you slide, the interface changes brightness. Something in this preference pane that isn't in the Photoshop equivalent is a slider and percentage field, which enables you to set the brightness of the interface exactly how you want it. And, designers and illustrators being the creatures of habit that they are, the most likely thing they'll do is go to Illustrator>Preferences>User Interface and change the brightness setting back to Medium Light or light. In fact, it's not even a gripe, it's purely an observation. It feels more like a post production tool - matching that of After Effects. The thing is, it doesn't really feel like Illustrator to a user of many years.

Adobe illustrator cs6 logo professional#

Like Photoshop, it gives Illustrator an undeniably more professional feel. If you've seen Photoshop CS6 you won't be that surprised - by default it's charcoal grey. The first thing you notice about Adobe Illustrator CS6 is that it looks different. So, what has Adobe done in Adobe Illustrator CS6? A facelift, some speed improvements, a few tweaks and one major addition that illustrators and designers in particular will love are all on the agenda. Over the years the application has been given some quite remarkable features - from the Gradient Mesh in the 1998 release of version 8 to multiple art boards in CS4 and the Perspective Grid in CS5 (which Adobe ported across from FreeHand, the tool it bought from Macromedia and then phased out), it is a behemoth of an application, whether you want to create photorealistic illustrations or slick logos. We dislike? Actually, there's not much to dislike. For Illustrator users working with patterns in any way, the new functionality is intuitive and extremely powerful. We like the redesigned interface, the intelligent tweaks to panels, the speed and the incredible new pattern creation tools. if you're just using Illustrator to design letterforms, create logos or design simple line drawings, you'll probably be happy sticking with the version you've got. When it comes to the crunch, if you use any kind of patterns within your work, it's a no-brainer. The minor additions make Adobe Illustrator CS6 a more rounded, quicker to navigate and use application, whereas the bigger additions - especially the pattern creation tools - make it a more versatile and powerful piece of software. The application looks slicker, is much faster and for the £190 standalone upgrade it's worth the cash. It's difficult not to recommend Adobe Illustrator CS6 - what it adds are a number of workflow and creative-focused tools that are genuinely excellent.








Adobe illustrator cs6 logo