Now eyeball that square bar for a minute because we have to make sure that it gives us the perfect shape that we require for our small case ‘F’ in the logo. Now bring your Square tool here and make sure it’s a stroke and not the fill. Your click will change the Unlock to Lock and keep your Guides consistent. To lock your Guides, go to the View menu, select Guides from the dropdown list, and click on Unlock Guides. You can change these lines and adjust them as you go, of course, but for now, I’m going to lock them and keep them engaged. To create the guides, you need three lines: The Baseline, the X-height, and the Ascender line. The guides help you work with the height, size, and proportions of letters in a much neater and balanced way and very little room for mistakes is left. I like to have my guides present when I’m working on typography-based projects to help keep the consistency and precision alive. I’m going to put this design up there and draw some guides. In its present form, it looks something like the above. Therefore, I’ve used Procreate in my iPad to draw this concept and work on it, and only now I’m coming to the Illustrator to use the Shape Builder tool to build around this logo. Step 1 Sketch the Logoīeing a designer, you probably know that the software side of the Illustrator or the software side of it is only about 5% of logo design the rest is all about your idea and concept. I am going to show you to create a logo from the concept to vectorizing it using the Shape Builder tool, which not many people use it to its full ability. So, today’s video is all about creating this beautiful typographical shape using a clever little feature in Adobe Illustrator called the Shape Builder tool.
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