Adobe illustrator 10 Manuale Utente

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Adobe Illustrator Help
Setting Up Artwork in Illustrator 
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To open a file created by another application:
Choose File > Open.
Locate and select the file you want to open. If you don’t see the name of the file you 
want, the file is stored in a format that Illustrator can’t read. See 
 for a complete list of all the file formats you can open.
Click Open. 
Note: If you open an EPS file that contains fonts not installed on your system, font substi-
tution will occur when you open and print.
To open a file that has recently been used:
Choose File > Open Recent Files, and select the filename from the list.
Opening Photoshop files in Illustrator
When opening a Photoshop file in Illustrator, you can preserve masks, blending modes, 
and transparency, and convert layers to separate Illustrator objects. When exporting an 
Illustrator file to Photoshop format, you can preserve layers, opacity masks, transparency 
(including blending modes), slices, image maps, compound shapes, and editable type. 
(See 
.)
Illustrator does not support some Photoshop features such as adjustment layers and layer 
effects. To maintain the effects in Illustrator, select Convert Photoshop Layers to Objects in 
the Photoshop Import dialog box, or flatten individual layers in Photoshop to embed the 
effects before importing the file into Illustrator.
Layer mask in Photoshop (top) converts to opacity mask in Illustrator (bottom), with preserved 
blending mode and transparency.
To open a file created by Photoshop:
Choose File > Open.
Locate and select a Photoshop file, and click Open.
In the Photoshop Import dialog box, choose a method to import Photoshop layers to 
Illustrator:
Select the Convert Photoshop Layers to Objects option to create a single layer in 
Illustrator containing objects that correspond to each Photoshop layer or clipping path 
(Illustrator only imports one clipping path per Photoshop file). If the Photoshop 
document contains layer sets, you can create corresponding sublayers. Any opacity 
masks that were applied to the Photoshop layers appear in the Transparency palette 
when you select the corresponding objects or sublayers.