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Visual QuickStart Guide Illustrator CS2 for Windows and Macintosh
book

Visual QuickStart Guide Illustrator CS2 for Windows and Macintosh

by Elaine Weinmann, Peter Lourekas
September 2005
Intermediate to advanced
632 pages
19h 33m
English
Peachpit Press
Content preview from Visual QuickStart Guide Illustrator CS2 for Windows and Macintosh

Chapter 2. How Illustrator Works

In this chapter you’ll learn the basic differences between object-oriented and bitmap applications and get a broad overview of how objects are created and edited in Illustrator.

Vector or Raster?

There are two main types of picture-making applications: bitmap (or “raster”) and object-oriented (or “vector”), and each type has its strengths and weaknesses. Bitmap programs are best suited for creating soft, painterly images, such as photo-collages, whereas object-oriented programs are better suited for creating sharp, smooth shapes, such as mechanical illustrations, and typographic designs, such as logos.

Drawings created in object-oriented programs such as Adobe Illustrator, are composed of separate, distinct, mathematically ...

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Publisher Resources

ISBN: 0321336569Purchase book