- Photo Inside of Type
- Start with a Font
- Mapping Made Easy
- Find Your Favorite Logo?
- Change Star Shape, Part One
- Change Star Shape, Part Two
- Send Up a Flare
- Permanent Pathfinder
- Spray On, Spray Off
- Years in Graph Data
- Thats Out of One Hundred
- Edit Graph Designs
- Sliding Graph Designs
- Drag-and-Drop Instead of Copy-and-Paste
- Change Tool Settings on the Fly
- Make Your Own Spirograph
- Convert to Shape
- Let the Blend Tool Do the Math
- More Blending
- Yet More Blending
- Bend the Blend
- Shapes Around a Circle
- Change the Blend
- Outline Stroke
- Live Trace Not Working How Youd Like? Try This
- Is Live Trace Still Not Working How Youd Like? Take It a Step Further
- Viewing Reference Photos When Using the Mesh Tool
- Gradient Brushes
- Divide Objects Below
- Change Grids on the Fly
- Live Interlocking Objects
- Live Interlocking Objects, Part 2
- Creating Wireframes
- Add to a Shape to Create a Shape
- Move Points as You Draw
- Auto Add/Delete Getting in Your Way
- Multiple Objects as a Mask
- Round Those Corners
- Same Width and Height
- Changing Arcs
- Close a Path Automatically
- Preserve Brush Stroke Options
- Disable Auto Add/Delete
- Split into Grid
- The Perfect Star
- Target Practice
- Opacity Masks
- Vintage Texture Effect
Vintage Texture Effect
Have you ever seen that old vintage/weathered style t-shirt? It looks like it’s been washed a thousand times but in reality it hasn’t. How do you know? Because you can buy this style of a t-shirt today brand new and I’m betting that the manufacturer hasn’t washed it that many times already. Anyway, it’s a nice effect and can easily be added to any of your artwork using Illustrator. First, open any graphics that you’d like to apply this vintage effect to. Then group them together, so you just have one object to work with. Next, import a grayscale texture image from anywhere—it could have been created in Photoshop or scanned in on a flatbed scanner. Place the texture on a layer above the artwork that you want to add the vintage effect to. Then select both the texture layer and the group containing the artwork and choose Make Opacity Mask from the Transparency palette’s flyout menu. All the areas that were black will now be the color of whatever is behind the grouped graphics (in this case the white artboard). If you want, you can add a rectangle in a layer below the group to change the color.