Adobe illustrator 10 Manuale Utente

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Adobe Illustrator Help
Using Appearance Attributes, Styles, and Effects 
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When you apply a style to a group or layer, every object on the group or layer takes on the 
attributes of the style. For example, assume you have a style that consists of 50% opacity. If 
you apply the style to a layer, all objects in or added to that layer will appear 50% opaque. 
However, if you move an object out of the layer, the object’s appearance reverts to its 
previous opacity. (See 
Note: You can’t apply styles to type objects that use outline-protected fonts or bitmap 
fonts. 
To apply a style:
Select artwork on the artboard, or target an item in the Layers palette. (See 
.
Note: If you selected a type object, select Override Character Color from the Styles palette 
menu to apply the style’s fill, stroke, and transparency attributes to the characters; or 
deselect Override Character Color from the Styles palette menu to preserve the current 
color of the characters.
Apply the style from the Styles palette:
Click a style in the list.
Drag the style onto an object on the artboard. The object does not have to be selected 
first.
Copy and apply a style using the eyedropper and paint bucket tools. Depending on 
what you specify in the Paint Bucket/Eyedropper Options dialog box, you can copy and 
paste the entire style or selected attributes.
Creating and modifying styles
A style can contain any combination of color, fill, stroke, pattern, effect (that is, any 
command listed under the Effect menu), transparency, blend mode, gradient, transfor-
mation, and the like. Each style can contain multiple attributes. For example, you can have 
three fills in a style, each with a different opacity and blend mode that defines how the 
various colors interact. Similarly, you can have multiple strokes.
To create or modify a style:
Do one of the following:
Select an object.
Select a style in the Styles palette to use as a starting set of attributes.
Start with no object or style selected.
Specify the appearance attributes you want, such as the fill or the stroke. You can use 
the Appearance palette to help specify and order the appearance attributes. (See 
Do one of the following:
Click the New Style button   at the bottom of the Styles palette.