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FreeHand®
Drawing Technique No. 5
Part A |
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| This technique is for drawing cylindrical
shapes with Macromedia® FreeHand. This is a very basic
and simple tutorial which can easily be done in a few
minutes. This tutorial was done with FreeHand 9 but the
same technique should work with most any version. |
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1. Create a new document and click View >
Snap To Point. This setting plays an important role in
this technique. Next, select the Ellipse tool in the Toolbox.

2. Draw an ellipse in the workspace similar
to the example below left. When you release the mouse button
you will see the ellipse with four dots around it (below center).
The ellipse is a group when you first draw it. We need access
to the anchor points so click Modify > Ungroup.
The appearance changes to the example shown below right.
3. Choose the Rectangle tool in the Toolbox.

4. Position the mouse pointer over the left
point. When you see the small square next to the pointer,
you are over the point (below left). Positioning the corner
of the rectangle directly over this point will place the corner
of the rectangle exactly on the edge of the ellipse. Click
and drag to make the rectangle (below right).
5. Position the mouse pointer over the upper
right corner of the rectangle. Press and hold the mouse button
down and drag the corner of the rectangle until it snaps to
the rightmost point of the ellipse (below center). The rectangle
now aligns perfectly with the ellipse (below right).
6. Next, clone the ellipse by clicking and dragging
the mouse while holding down the Shift and Alt (Windows®)
or Option (Macintosh®) key at the same time (below left).
Drag this copy of the rectangle downwards. Release the mouse
button before releasing the Shift and Alt/Opt key.
The Shift key constrains the position of the cloned ellipse
to vertical so it aligns with the original. The mouse pointer
has a plus sign next to it indicating that you are cloning
the object. You will see this plus sign as long as the Alt/Opt
key is held down. Click and drag either the rectangle's bottom
left point (below center) or bottom right point (below right)
and snap it to the corresponding point of the ellipse. Only
one of the two sides needs to be snapped and the direction
only needs to be up or down since the width of the rectangle
has already been established.
7. We need to make a copy of the top ellipse
because we need to save it. Then we need to combine the original
with the rectangle. Click once with the Pointer tool to select
it then click Edit > Clone.
 
8. In the Layers panel , click the Options button.

Click
Here To Continue...
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