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How to Fine Tune the Design and Finalize It

Lesson 20 from: Adobe Illustrator: From Shapes to Complex & Beautiful Illustrations

Junichi Tsuneoka

How to Fine Tune the Design and Finalize It

Lesson 20 from: Adobe Illustrator: From Shapes to Complex & Beautiful Illustrations

Junichi Tsuneoka

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Lesson Info

20. How to Fine Tune the Design and Finalize It

Next Lesson: Exercise

Lessons

Class Trailer

Course Introduction

1

Introduction

01:44
2

Basic Concept of the Course

00:58
3

Examples and Applications

00:39
4

Process Overview

01:44
5

Quiz - Introduction

Getting Started

6

Concept Development

09:12
7

Tips for Pencil Sketch

18:12
8

Shape Tool Basics

06:58
9

Shape Tool Advance

08:36
10

How to Control Shapes by Different Movements

04:49
11

How to Control Shapes By Reflect Skew and Rotate Tools to Create Complex Shapes

05:45
12

Combine Multiple Shapes with Pathfinder Tool

04:19
13

Create Complex Shapes with Pathfinder Tool

06:51
14

Quiz - Getting Started

Case Study 1: Stand Alone Graphic

15

Case Study 1 Overview (Stand Alone Design)

02:04
16

Creating an Environment for Converting the Pencil Sketch into Editable Vector Graphic

03:29
17

Create a Group of Shapes to be Used as a Base of the Illustration

13:03
18

How to Introduce Large Medium and Small Design Elements to the Overall Design to Achieve Depth and More Detailed Result

05:43
19

Adding Colors

11:12
20

How to Fine Tune the Design and Finalize It

03:27
21

Exercise

00:51
22

Quiz - Case Study 1: Stand Alone Graphic

Case Study 2: Illustrative Pattern

23

Case Study 2 Overview (Illustrative Pattern)

01:41
24

Creating an Environment for Converting the Pencil Sketch into Editable Vector Graphic

01:37
25

Create a Small Unit of Complex Shapes to Use as a Base of the Whole Illustration

14:01
26

How to Introduce Large Medium and Small Design Elements to the Overall Design to Achieve Depth and More Detailed Result

01:48
27

How to Introduce Foreground Middle and Background Elements to the Overall Design to Achieve More Depth

09:56
28

Adding Colors

07:27
29

How to Fine Tune the Design and Finalize It

06:38
30

Quiz - Case Study 2: Illustrative Pattern

Conclusion

31

Conclusion

00:59

Final Quiz

32

Final Quiz

Lesson Info

How to Fine Tune the Design and Finalize It

in this lesson, I will explain how to finalize the design by fine tuning it, finalizing or fine tuning the image means you will look at everything in the image and adjust them. You want to just one last time on ah on a few items. So now you have all the details here. And sometimes that will change the overall field. Or sometimes the adding the detail will give you more opportunity to adjust overall balance. So you want to adjust especially negative spaces, distance between shapes. I'm looking at this area in this area, Those empty spaces. In other words, negative spaces, you want to have a variety of space in the negative space also has to have balance around the main design area. It is natural to have more empty space is more negative spaces. Then within the main design area you have less negative space but within different areas of negative space you have smaller spaces or bigger spaces. Well look at this and we want to adjust them as well. Right now, I am looking at this side face p...

ieces and I feel like there are a little bit too much space here because this actually belongs to the face but because of the distance it might be a little bit disconnected so I will move them a little closer and also by looking at the overall balance. Sometimes you feel like you want to add more details and also you want to look at overall color balance and make sure the balance is consistent and make sure all the color makes sense. And by doing this, it's important that we don't lose the sense of focal point. Now, when you add more details at this point, it is important to keep the details very subtle meaning. Almost everything is there and everything is working already. So if you add something big, for example, it will just make the image more confusing. So you do not, so you don't want to introduce something big anymore, It has to be rather something small. Now the design is complete. Once you're familiar with this process, you can probably understand how this approach can apply to many different projects, and you should be able to adjust the process based on nature of the project.

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