Optimized Workflow For Pattern Design In Adobe Illustrator



Last updated 7/2020
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280×720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 809.12 MB | Duration: 1h 2m
Learn to work smarter, not harder, when designing a full fabric collection! Included: Free Templates with explanation


What you’ll learn
How to Improve Efficiency with an Optimized Workflow in Adobe Illustrator
Learn to use the Free Bonus Template Documents
Learn to work with full collections
Create complete fabric collections
Requirements
Adobe Illustrator experience is an asset, or any software program with similar capabilities
Desire to improve pattern design skills
Description
Once you have been doing pattern design for a while, you will feel like it is an issue to stay organized with all the files and steps necessary to fill out an entire collection. There are the initial development files, the experiments, the tests and then all the final content including the hero pattern, the secondary, blenders and coordinates. It can become a crazy mess if you don’t have a system. While keeping this all straight, you are also trying to get faster at it all, because we all know, in the design game, time is money! In this course, Optimized Workflow for Pattern Design, I’m sharing everything I’ve learned in optimizing the pattern design workflow which I have learned from hours of creating and perfecting. You will see my personal technique for staying organized in the design of an entire collection and all the ways I have found to be as efficient as humanly possible. With my process, you can literally create multiple patterns or an entire collection is a few days. With experience, you will soon improve that! I hope you will learn from all my techniques. I will be providing you with FREE valuable assets that will shave time off the process for you and help you become a better professional designer in the process. This course follows up the Folk Art Inspired Half Drop Toss Pattern Course, where you learned how to create a specific toss pattern with a half-drop. I will be using all the assets developed during that course, so it is perfect as part of the continuum.I’ll show you my step-by-step process, from using the easy master document (which I am providing for free), to best practices for its use. We will work with this document so I can explain every step I take, and I will explain the rationale behind using it. We will be creating the template with transformations (which I am also providing for free), and I will also explain why it is so useful, and how it saves time. All the concepts can be used in any patterns you make down the line, and skills are transferable to any software that has similar functionality. The value of a course like this, especially when you are first starting out, cannot be underestimated! I wish I had been given this info when I first started designing patterns!As far as prerequisite skills, I would recommend some knowledge of pattern-making with the goal of wanting to learn additional techniques. In class, we’ll talk about both design and technical aspects of workflow optimization. We’ll discuss theory which enhances and reinforces total organization. I will be demonstrating using Illustrator, but it’s the concepts that are important, and these could easily be applied to similar software as well. Although some of the steps may seem confusing, I will demonstrate them at a reasonable pace so that it will be easy to follow along. This course is for all levels; I recommend being acquainted with Illustrator somewhat, and, also knowing the basic principles of creating pattern repeats, but most steps are explained very thoroughly. I suggest pausing and repeating sections and possibly even slowing the speed if you are in your browser. Adobe Illustrator is recommended for this class, as that is what is being featured here, and it makes use of the Transformation Effects and the Appearance Panel.The key concepts I will include:review of my techniques in creating the repeat pattern using the transformation templatemethods to automate with transformations and why they help you be more productiveorganizational considerations for naming protocols when exporting assets or naming artboardsgood examples, reference and inspiration for reinforcing the goalother approaches you can take in your creative surface pattern design workThis course is packed with copious amounts of information for you no matter what stage you are at in your career. Kick-off your journey to efficiency today, so you can be benefitting from this practical knowledge double-time in your design practice! Being efficient and working faster and more effectively is absolutely obtainable with this small investment of time. Let’s dig in!Intro: Optimized Workflow for Designing Pattern CollectionsThis short intro will give you an overview of the class and rationale for use of templates.Lesson 1: Organizing the WorkflowIn this lesson, I review the use of the attached template (found in the class resources). I explain the processes I went through in the last class and give you an idea of the strategies I employ to improve efficiency and productivity.Lesson 2: Value of the Transformation TemplateIn this lesson, I demonstrate the use of the template and explain its virtues. I take the opportunity to reinforce keyboard shortcuts and I share a few other tips and tricks.Lesson 3: Working with the TemplateI continue to demonstrate the use of the template and I explain the value of the icons and saved brushes. The layer’s panel is explained thoroughly in this lesson. I also show moving the swatch back into the main document and what to do with it there. I explain the use of the Navigator as well.Lesson 4: Motifs, Brushes and SwatchesI review the positive attributes of brushes, icons, and motifs and how they improve my speed when designing. I also explain the differences between the main pattern and its coordinates.Lesson 5: Last Checks and Asset ExportingAt this stage of the game, we will be doing final checks and I explain the kinds of thigs I look for. Next, we will export the assets using the asset export panel and I explain the ins-and-outs of that procedure. We talk about resolution requirements and saving.Lesson 6: Efficient Mockup HandlingDoing final checks is definitely enhanced with the use of mockups. I explain why in this lesson.Lesson 7: Exporting Pattern SwatchesIn this lesson, I discuss the best practices for exporting pattern swatches. I show you one of the main issues facing pattern designers when importing Illustrator swatches into Photoshop; the edge artifacts that lead to a hairline around the pattern repeat. Then we talk about the fix! Also, I cover the method I use for exporting a pattern swatch for a half drop repeat into a grid format that can be used as-is for a pattern swatch in Photoshop.Lesson 8: Persistence with Swatches and PalettesAnother quick trick will be revealed in this lesson, and it’s all about having brushes, swatches and colors available every time you create a new document in Illustrator.OutroWe will conclude everything in this lesson with a chat about next steps.Concepts covered:Concepts covered include but are not limited to pattern design, repeated patterns, surface pattern design, Illustrator repeat, Illustrator pattern design tool, Illustrator transformation effect, working with transformation templates, the Appearance Panel, arranging motifs, using Illustrator brushes, essential Illustrator keyboard shortcuts, optimizing Illustrator workflow, organizing and renaming swatches, efficiency habits, double-checking, naming protocols, persistence, saving swatches, saving brushes, and much more!You will get the bonus of.approx hour of direction from an instructor who has been in the graphic design business and education for over 40 yearsawareness of multiple approaches to resolve each design challengehandouts explaining key conceptsa list of helpful online sites to further your education into surface pattern design.
Overview
Section 1: Introduction
Lecture 1 Organizing Your Workflow
Lecture 2 The Value of the Transformation Template
Lecture 3 Working with the Template
Lecture 4 Motifs, Brushes and Swatches
Lecture 5 Last Checks and Asset Exporting
Lecture 6 Efficient Mockup Handling
Lecture 7 Exporting Pattern Swatches
Lecture 8 Persistence with Swatches and Palettes
Lecture 9 Wrap-up
Surface Pattern Designers looking to up their game when producing entire collections,Student with a desire to improve pattern design skills and efficiency designing

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