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Adobe Illustrator Training Course
Digital Illustration Advanced
Create
pro-quality illustrations using Adobe Illustrator |
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| Digital illustration is a challenging and expressive area of graphic
design. Working in Illustrator, you can develop your unique personal style as an artist.

In this 6-lesson course, you'll
learn advanced illustration and Adobe Illustrator techniques for communicating your creative concepts.
Through detailed, step-by-step lectures, you'll learn how a professional illustrator approaches creating editorial illustrations, icons, retro poster designs, 3D illustrations, and restaurant identity designs.
Open-ended projects will help you develop portfolio-quality illustrations. You'll develop your own style and artistic flair, making your work
more powerful and distinctive. |
Tuition:
$803 US   |
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Faculty:
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Course Developer/Instructor:
Andrew Shalat is an author, designer/illustrator, educator, and Mac expert ... get bio
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Prerequisites: |
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| To take this course, you'll need: |
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Computer with Internet connection (56 Kbps modem or
faster). |
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Adobe Illustrator CS2 or CS3. |
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Basic experience in drawing and the software packages
needed for this course.* |
| * If needed, the following course(s) can help you meet
the above requirements: |
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Digital
Illustration Basics |
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back to top |
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Objectives:
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Students can expect to learn how to: |
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Create editorial illustrations, icons, retro poster designs, 3D illustrations, and book title designs in Illustrator.
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Develop and sketch illustration concepts to prepare them for digital creation. |
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Use shape and freehand drawing tools to create complex shapes and patterns. |
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Use gradients to create lighting and shadow effects. |
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Import bitmap and vector art into Illustrator and create guides for illustration. |
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Create simple iconographic illustrations and shapes. |
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Develop proficiency in drawing or tracing using the Pen tool. |
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Create illustrations inspired by 1930s era WPA-style posters. |
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Create objects with 3D proportions and lighting effects and place them in perspective on a plane. |
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Create a sequential illustration that repeats certain features and colors over a series of frames to maintain a consistent look. |
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Design a symmetrical title or identity that integrates repeated graphic elements and typography. |
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Outline: |
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LESSON
1 Conceptual Composition Lesson One explores the challenge of editorial illustration. You'll explore how to define a concept, brainstorm ideas, and sketch options. Then you'll open up Illustrator and follow an illustration project that incorporates basic shapes and transformations, gradients, importing line art into Illustrator, lighting and shadow, chrome effects, iconographic shapes, and accents. The exercise will challenge you to develop an editorial illustration of your own.
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LESSON
2 Pen Tool Studies The Pen tool is your favorite
tool, right? If not, Lesson Two will give you a thorough
workout in using this indispensable Illustrator feature. You'll begin with a fun but extended tracing project that will stretch your Pen tool prowess and give you techniques for reworking bitmap images in Illustrator. In the second half of the lesson, you'll examine the process of creating simple, iconographic illustrations (icons) that are easy to recognize in black and white at different sizes. The exercise that follows will combine both elements—you'll create a basic guide from a bitmap image then reduce it to iconographic simplicity.
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LESSON
3 Color and Interpretation Illustrators are often asked to work in retro or period styles. Lesson Three takes you back to the 1930s as you recreate a poster in the WPA style. You'll use basic lines and different Pen tool techniques to create stylized line art and enhance it with color and shading, lights and darks, and midtones. You'll set your illustration in a dramatic context and add art deco typography too. In the project, you'll create a WPA design of your own—a whole New Deal!
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LESSON 4
Light, Shadow, and Perspective The Renaissance artists captured light, shadow, and perspective in their representations of three-dimensional form. In Lesson Four, you'll explore techniques for creating 3D objects and effects. First, you'll create a template for drawing objects in one-point perspective. Then you'll create an object, comparing how to simulate three dimensions through traditional highlights versus 3D effects. Finally, you'll learn how to place objects in the foreground or background of a composition, scale them proportionally using perspective lines, and add realistic shadows. The exercise will a study in perspective and proportion. |
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LESSON
5 Illustration in Sequence Sequential illustrations are like the panes in a comic strip. Each frame has some common characters, or elements, and yet each depicts a different action, or even just a continuation of an action.
Lesson Five focuses on creating a series of related drawings, a
task that a designer is often called upon to do. By creating a character
and repeating colors and other visual elements through a series
of scenes, you'll create a sequence that is both consistent and
varied. In the exercise, you'll apply the techniques you've learned in creating a short storyboard. |
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LESSON 6 Theme and Repetition, Symmetry and Type
What good are great illustrations without a unifying theme or composition? In
Lesson Six, you'll put it all together—you'll develop a theme, and using colors, symmetry, repeated elements, and type, create a unified illustration for a restaurant logo design. This lesson integrates everything you've learned in the course and explores the challenge of making imagery and typography work together. The final project will be a show-stopper for your portfolio, as you develop a book cover title illustration.
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| Tuition:
$803 US
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