
When you hover over the annotator (the key to getting
it to work), you’ll also see fi ve-sided color stops and tiny
square midpoint skews, both labeled in Figure 7-1. Drag a
color stop to change its location. Double-click it to display
a pop-up Color panel and assign a new color. (You may
need to click the icon and choose CMYK to ac-
cess anything other than gray values.) Click along
the edge of the annotator to add a new color stop.
Drag the midpoint skew square to change the speed
at which one color stop transitions into the next.
Gradients are all very fl exible once you come to
terms with them. Problem is, Illustrator offers just
two styles of gradient: linear, in which one color
transitions directly into another, and radial, which
fi lls the shape with concentric rings of color. (You
switch between them from the Gradient panel.) That’s
fi ne for design work. The many gradient boxes and back-
grounds in this book, for example, are fi lled with linear
gradients. But what if you’re trying to approximate real-
life or otherwise volumetric shading inside an illustration?
That, my friend, is when you resort to blends and meshes.
Designing Custom Gradients
Despite the fact that it was introduced more than 20 years
ago, Illustrator’s second gradient solution, blending, contin-
ues to rank among the program’s most powerful capabili-
ties. Blending permits you to design custom gradation