Thomas Giannattasio presents several practical techniques to help you refine your designs, increase productivity and reduce layer clutter.
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Tara Hornor takes a look at one of the less-mentioned features of Adobe Illustrator: the Warp tools. The aim of this article is to provide one more resource to improve your logos, illustrations, posters and more.
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Adobe InDesign is the primary application of print designers for laying out multiple pages and assembling print documents. In this post, Matthew Potter gives you, Web-based developer, a look at some of the tools in InDesign that translate directly into what you currently use.
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A list of useful and time-saving Photoshop resources to improve your design skills as well as your professional workflow. From Smashing Magazine to our readers, to make the search of these ever-growing techniques easier.
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When creating Web and app interfaces, add this small changes to your workflow. Move, rotate and paste maintaining the highest-quality artwork from the start to the end of the project.
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We always try our best to challenge your artistic abilities and produce some interesting, beautiful and creative artwork. And as designers we usually turn to different sources of inspiration. As a matter of fact, we’ve discovered the best one — desktop wallpapers that are a little more distinctive than the usual crowd. This creativity mission has been going on for almost two years now, and we are very thankful to all designers who have contributed and are still diligently contributing each month.
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Two weeks ago we published the first part of Photoshop tips and tricks for photo retouching. Today, we’ll be presenting the rest of the article. We hope that these techniques will be quite useful for your workflow. You may know some of them, but hopefully not all of them. We have had articles on various tools in Adobe Photoshop but this one is focused more on the techniques rather than the tools provided. Please note that all images used in this article were purchased and are used according to their licenses.
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I love Adobe InDesign. For multi-page documents, it’s the most flexible and complete application out there. Yet I remember how counter-intuitive some things were when I was learning it for the first time. Here are some tips I wish I had known when starting out, as well as some answers to questions that others often ask me. This is not intended to be a manual; some good ones are already out there (although I personally learned by doing). Hopefully, these tips will help you make the best of your day-to-day use of InDesign.
If you are preparing a document for print, keep your margins and bleeds in mind from the beginning. Your printer will give you the measurements for the bleed, but generally 1⁄8 inch or 3 mm should suffice. Approximately the same area within the document should be kept free of text and important graphic elements (such as the logo). Set up your document for bleed in InDesign as you create it by selecting the correct settings in the document set-up box.
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