Where to find flare tool in illustrator
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Cool, eh? The Flare tool creates rather complex objects, and it works somewhat differently than the other tools with which you've just worked. Keep in mind that you'll always need a click-drag and another click to complete a flare.
In the Toolbox, click on the Star tool or which ever of the object tools is currently showing and drag the cursor to the right to select the Flare tool. With the Flare tool active, click in the center of the artboard and drag a short way toward the upper-left corner of the artboard. When the paths that you're creating stretch almost to the edges of the artboard, release the mouse button as shown in Figure 3.
Figure 3. With the cursor a short distance to the up and right of the center of your flare, click the mouse button once. This completes the flare, as shown in Figure 3. Before you release the mouse button, experiment with the Shift key and the Command Mac Control Windows key. Press them both and continue dragging. Notice that Shift stops the flare from rotating as you drag. Again, release the mouse button, move the cursor a short distance and click once.
This completes the flare. It should still be selected on the artboard. In the Toolbox, double-click the Flare tool's icon to open the Flare dialog box, as shown in Figure 3. Thankfully, it has a Preview option. Rather than attempt to explain what each variable is and what it does, just click on the checkbox next to Preview and we'll look at some basics.
Move the dialog box out of the way if necessary by dragging its title bar. The first thing to do, perhaps, is to uncheck the Rings box and then recheck it. That shows you the two major parts, the flare and its rings. Change the amount in Diameter to 50 pt, and then press the Tab key which moves you to the next field and tells Illustrator to accept the value you just entered.
The Preview will update the look on the artboard. Click back in the Diameter field, enter pt, and hit Tab again. You get the idea. Have fun. See if you can figure out what each control does to the flare. The Cancel button has changed to Reset. Click reset and see what Illustrator's programmers have decided a flare should look like.
Click OK. Press Delete to send your flare to that place where professional photographers try to send real lens flares. I would like to receive exclusive offers and hear about products from InformIT and its family of brands. I can unsubscribe at any time. Pearson Education, Inc. This privacy notice provides an overview of our commitment to privacy and describes how we collect, protect, use and share personal information collected through this site.
Please note that other Pearson websites and online products and services have their own separate privacy policies. Draw with the Pen, Pencil, or Flare tool Search. Draw with the Pen tool. Draw straight line segments with the Pen tool. Select the Pen tool. Position the Pen tool where you want the straight segment to begin, and click to define the first anchor point do not drag. Continue clicking to set anchor points for additional straight segments.
Complete the path by doing one of the following:. Draw curves with the Pen tool. Position the Pen tool where you want the curve to begin, and hold down the mouse button. Position the Pen tool where you want the curve segment to end, and do one of the following:. Continue dragging the Pen tool from different locations to create a series of smooth curves. Note that you are placing anchor points at the beginning and end of each curve, not at the tip of the curve. Reposition anchor points as you draw.
After you click to create an anchor point, keep the mouse button pressed down, hold down the spacebar, and drag to reposition the anchor point. Finish drawing a path. Complete a path in one of the following ways:.
Draw straight lines followed by curves. Using the Pen tool, click corner points in two locations to create a straight segment. Position the Pen tool over the selected endpoint. In Illustrator and InDesign, a convert-point icon appears next to the Pen tool when it is positioned correctly In Photoshop, a small diagonal line, or slash, appears next to the Pen tool. Position the pen where you want the next anchor point; then click and drag, if desired the new anchor point to complete the curve.
Draw curves followed by straight lines. Using the Pen tool, drag to create the first smooth point of the curved segment, and release the mouse button.
Reposition the Pen tool where you want the curved segment to end, drag to complete the curve, and release the mouse button. A convert-point icon appears next to the Pen tool when it is positioned correctly. Click the anchor point to convert the smooth point to a corner point. Reposition the Pen tool where you want the straight segment to end, and click to complete the straight segment. Draw two curved segments connected by a corner.
Using the Pen tool, drag to create the first smooth point of a curved segment. Reposition the Pen tool and drag to create a curve with a second smooth point; then press and hold Alt Windows or Option Mac OS and drag the direction line toward its opposing end to set the slope of the next curve.
Release the key and the mouse button. This process converts the smooth point to a corner point by splitting the direction lines. Reposition the Pen tool where you want the second curved segment to end, and drag a new smooth point to complete the second curved segment.
Draw with the Pencil tool. Draw freeform paths with the Pencil tool. Select the Pencil tool. Position the tool where you want the path to begin, and drag to draw a path. The Pencil tool displays a small x to indicate drawing a freeform path. Draw closed paths with the Pencil tool. Position the tool where you want the path to begin, and start dragging to draw a path.
When the path is the size and shape you want, release the mouse button but not the Alt or Option key. After the path closes, release the Alt or Option key. Edit paths with the Pencil tool. You can edit any path using the Pencil tool and add freeform lines and shapes to any shape. Add to a path with the Pencil tool.
Select an existing path. Position the pencil tip on an endpoint of the path. Drag to continue the path. Connect two paths with the Pencil tool. Select both paths Shift-click or drag around the two with the Selection tool. Position the pointer where you want to begin from one path, and start dragging toward the other path. Drag onto the endpoint of the other path, release the mouse button, and then release the Ctrl or Command key.
Reshape paths with the Pencil tool. Select the path you want to change. Position the Pencil tool on or near the path to redraw.
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