Adobe illustrator 10 Manual Do Utilizador

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Adobe Illustrator Help
Using Transparency, Gradients, and Patterns 
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When the upper left corner point of the copy snaps to the upper right corner point of the 
bounding box, release the mouse button, and then release Alt+Shift (Windows) or 
Option+Shift (Mac OS). 
If you know the exact dimensions of the bounding box, you can select only the 
textures and use the Move command to specify a horizontal move the width of the 
rectangle. Be sure to click Copy instead of OK in the Move dialog box.
Click outside the rectangle to deselect it.
Select the right rectangle, and delete it.
Using the pencil tool  , continue drawing your texture with only the objects or lines 
that intersect the top side of the rectangle. When you finish with the top side only, select 
all of the lines or objects crossing the top side and the bounding box.
Draw texture on top side of bounding box (left). Then copy texture and rectangle (right).
When the upper left corner point of the copy snaps to the lower left corner point of the 
rectangle, release the mouse button and then Alt+Shift (Windows) or Option+Shift 
(Mac OS). 
10 Deselect everything.
11 Select the lower rectangle and any objects that don’t cross the top rectangle, and 
delete them. 
12 Using the pencil tool, fill the middle of the rectangle with your texture. Be careful not 
to intersect any of the rectangle edges. Paint the texture.
13 Define the artwork and rectangle as a pattern, following the procedure in 
.
Creating corner tiles for brush patterns
Corner tiles lend special border effects when applying brush patterns. You can create 
corner tiles from scratch, or you can use a brush pattern’s side tile as the basis for 
designing complementary outer and inner (reflected –135 degrees) corner tiles. 
To create symmetrical corner tiles from a side tile:
Choose File > Open, locate a brush pattern file, supplied with Adobe Illustrator, that you 
want to use, and click Open.
Choose Window > Brushes. Select the tile you want to use, and drag it to the center of 
your artwork.
If the tile does not have a square bounding box, create a box that completely encom-
passes the artwork, the same height as the side tile. (Side tiles can be rectangular.) Fill and 
stroke the box with None, and choose Object > Arrange > Send to Back to make the box 
backmost in your artwork. (The bounding box helps you align the new tile.)