@Will Paterson, Bezier curves are so powerful. Thank you for these great techniques. Nerdy trivia: placement of the stabilizer anchors is best on the inflection points of the curve, that is where the curve goes from concave upward to concave downward -- or shifts from concave leftward to concave rightward. And vice versa. And I thought Differential calculus was never going to come in handy, bwahahaha! (Inflection points occur when the second derivative of the curve becomes zero.)
I've been designing for over 10 years and I've never seen the pen tool taught in this way! Stellar Job mate! You're another channel I watch to prime my day for my work! Long time subscriber, Looking forward to the next upload!
Love this format! Would appreciate if you make more videos like this about different tools, menu, properties. This format is easy to digest and easy to find and access when needed (compared to a looooong video where you have to watch so much unnecessary content to find just a tiny information you're looking for)
At school, just a few months ago, when I wanted to design a type logo and vektorize my handlettering sketch, my teacher told me I shouldn't do it because it would be too hard. This video taught me that I can really do it and it is easy. Thank You so much!!
@@pleasejustletmebeanonymous6510 I don't know, but he's kind of weird in generell. Like he always convices every student in 2nd year to use InDesign for logodesign instead of Illustrator because the exams in 3rd year could include to design like a flyer, poster or whatever - things you normally use InDesign for. He really things it's hard to learn using two programs in those 3 years, while some student (including me) learn using at least 3 to 4. Even my teacher in UX/UI thought this is bs lmao.
I wish that smart guides would activate when positioning handles so that you could be sure that 'symmetrical' curves were the same; for example, in your opening circle illustration, it's easy enough to make sure that the opposite anchor points are lined up (as when positioning anchor points the smart guides do kick in), but the only way I've ever found (and I'd love to be proved wrong !) to make the handles line up is to draw, say, a box where you want the handles to be, and then pull the anchor points out to touch the side of that box. ??
Bezier curves are so powerful. Thank you for these great techniques. Nerdy trivia: placement of the stabilizer anchors is best on the inflection points of the curve, that is where the curve goes from concave upward to concave downward -- or shifts from concave leftward to concave rightward. And vice versa. And I thought Differential calculus was never going to come in handy, bwahahaha! (The inflection points occur when the second derivative becomes zero.)
Came here to say this! Also the extreme points correspond with the maximums/minimums of the curve (were the line changes direction from left to right or down to up for example) math ftw
Professor Patterson! I appreciate your ability to explain the pen tool in layman's terms. This makes sense. I have struggled often with many unnecessary node adjustments my entire career. This was TRULY a golden tip. Thank you for sharing.
If I'm not mistaken you made a similar video years ago. I learnt to use the pen tool this way from that video before I started my design career. It was one of the most important things I learnt when I was getting in logo design. Thanks for sharing with us ☺️
I wish this video popped up the first time I touched the pen tool. I've been arting for like a decade now and been doing more and more vector with every year, but I'm still so clumsy and basic at it, but knowing there's optimal places to stick the little pieces MIGHT HAVE HELPED SHEESH! Thank you. :)
I have been asking and asking artists how they decide where to add points because i really need to make my drawings flawless. And here you are with the perfect answer that makes perfect sense! Thank you so so so much
I’ve been using illustrator since version 7 and this is by far the most succinct and simple explanation I’ve ever seen on the exact way the pen tool was intended to be used, and how best to wield it.
And yet the almighty Will with another tutorial! Too bad I always end up watching your videos whenever I am _not_ near my computer. The urge to put that knowledge into practice. Thanks a lot for being here for us, Will.
Super helpful and informative! I’ll definitely be implementing this technique. I can’t tell you how much I’ve struggled with wobbly lines using the pen tool.
Great video and interesting way of using the regular guides as kind of placement markers where the points should go. Haven’t thought of that way before so I find it pretty useful
That’s the way I’ve always worked the pen tool. I had always noticed how the handles looked on circles and tried to emulate that in my drawing. I never knew how far out the handles should go a lot of times though. But this was great reassurance that I wasn’t the only one that tried to draw shapes the same way Illustrator does!
I would agree with some of what was said, using fewer points is certainly important for getting nice smooth results, but I would disagree that one needs to align on a horizontal or vertical tangent whenever possible or that it is either "the way that vector works" or a "HACK". Sounds like a lot of folks didn't even know about aligning the anchors though, so I guess it helped those people.
Very nice content. I was a tattoo artist and illustrator for 12 years now getting into some graphic design. Never understood why the app was called illustrator not photoshop design. I just use my iPad Pro and use procreate but finally giving AI a go. Very helpful
Pressing the direct selection tool and then the pen tool will set up a tool history so then you can alternate quickly between direct selection tool and the pen tool even faster by holding the alt key.
You can also just hit the a and v key to switch to the pointers, and the p key to swap to the pen. I do most of my tool switching with the keys. m to make rectangles, l to make circles. Lots of other too switches on the keyboard.
Love it! I knew the rule of less is more regarding anchor points and making sure lines are vertical and horizontal but I had no idea to use them with the guide lines! Now I want to create a new logo for our own brand using this technique! Unless you want to ;) I designed our logo (not a logo designer) with my partners brief he gave me as a guide. That was almost 8 years ago! PS... its on the T-shirt i'm my profile pic! So many things going on with it and definitely needs an update!
clicked video thinking it would be something silly like "if you hold spacebar you can move the point" or some other less know shortcut. Was pleasently surprised. Kudos
It was just a few weeks ago that I thought I figured out the pen tool.😂 I will practice this. I usually end up with funky handles and not so smooth curves.
Today I was thinking why Professioanls use Guides to make curves and logos in there projects now i know Cuase of you it will help ma a lot Thanks Sir I've learned a lot from you
First of all amazing tips, comes in very handy actually! About 3:33 I always wondered why you can't select two anchor points and just automatically make them equally long or extend them proportionally instead of trying to make them equal manually. Is there a trick for that too?
Love your channel. Question: in After Effects, those points are called vertices, not anchor points. I thought the anchor point was a singular point in space on a given layer defining the point from which a shape/object scales and rotates. Is this term different in Illustrator? Thank you! :)
If this video helped you consider subscribing and sharing!
Did you forget you taught us this two years ago.
@@quakerninja some ppl haven’t seen it and are new here man shut up, let him create whatever he wants
@@quakerninja RUDE!
@Will Paterson, Bezier curves are so powerful. Thank you for these great techniques.
Nerdy trivia: placement of the stabilizer anchors is best on the inflection points of the curve, that is where the curve goes from concave upward to concave downward -- or shifts from concave leftward to concave rightward. And vice versa.
And I thought Differential calculus was never going to come in handy, bwahahaha! (Inflection points occur when the second derivative of the curve becomes zero.)
When using the pen tool should my line stroke be centered/inside/outside, also what stroke? This always confuses me.
I've been designing for over 10 years and I've never seen the pen tool taught in this way! Stellar Job mate! You're another channel I watch to prime my day for my work! Long time subscriber, Looking forward to the next upload!
Thank you so much :) I'm glad I can be of service :)
Me too, only it’s been more than 30 years. This is so useful. Thank you!
Word! This is going to save me alot of time. So glad I checked this out
I have NEVER thought to work on the curves piece by piece like that. Definitely just improved my workflow, thanks a lot Will!!
Love this format!
Would appreciate if you make more videos like this about different tools, menu, properties. This format is easy to digest and easy to find and access when needed (compared to a looooong video where you have to watch so much unnecessary content to find just a tiny information you're looking for)
At school, just a few months ago, when I wanted to design a type logo and vektorize my handlettering sketch, my teacher told me I shouldn't do it because it would be too hard. This video taught me that I can really do it and it is easy. Thank You so much!!
You're welcome! So glad it's helped :D
@@pleasejustletmebeanonymous6510 I don't know, but he's kind of weird in generell. Like he always convices every student in 2nd year to use InDesign for logodesign instead of Illustrator because the exams in 3rd year could include to design like a flyer, poster or whatever - things you normally use InDesign for. He really things it's hard to learn using two programs in those 3 years, while some student (including me) learn using at least 3 to 4. Even my teacher in UX/UI thought this is bs lmao.
I wish that smart guides would activate when positioning handles so that you could be sure that 'symmetrical' curves were the same; for example, in your opening circle illustration, it's easy enough to make sure that the opposite anchor points are lined up (as when positioning anchor points the smart guides do kick in), but the only way I've ever found (and I'd love to be proved wrong !) to make the handles line up is to draw, say, a box where you want the handles to be, and then pull the anchor points out to touch the side of that box. ??
Bezier curves are so powerful. Thank you for these great techniques.
Nerdy trivia: placement of the stabilizer anchors is best on the inflection points of the curve, that is where the curve goes from concave upward to concave downward -- or shifts from concave leftward to concave rightward. And vice versa.
And I thought Differential calculus was never going to come in handy, bwahahaha! (The inflection points occur when the second derivative becomes zero.)
Came here to say this! Also the extreme points correspond with the maximums/minimums of the curve (were the line changes direction from left to right or down to up for example) math ftw
Professor Patterson! I appreciate your ability to explain the pen tool in layman's terms. This makes sense. I have struggled often with many unnecessary node adjustments my entire career. This was TRULY a golden tip. Thank you for sharing.
If I'm not mistaken you made a similar video years ago. I learnt to use the pen tool this way from that video before I started my design career. It was one of the most important things I learnt when I was getting in logo design. Thanks for sharing with us ☺️
I just find that video a couple days ago! I've been practicing using it, it's such a gem.
Been using illustrator since 1991 and never sees to amaze me how many tricks this program has, if you now how to use it. Respect my friend!
Gotta be honest guys, this is the best pen tutorial in the world, holy molly man, good job xD
I wish this video popped up the first time I touched the pen tool. I've been arting for like a decade now and been doing more and more vector with every year, but I'm still so clumsy and basic at it, but knowing there's optimal places to stick the little pieces MIGHT HAVE HELPED SHEESH!
Thank you. :)
WILL YOU DID IT, YOU MAD MAN!
Thank you so much!
No problem! :D
I have been asking and asking artists how they decide where to add points because i really need to make my drawings flawless. And here you are with the perfect answer that makes perfect sense! Thank you so so so much
I've been teaching this method for years. (The clockwork method.) Hands down the best way to teach the pen tool to beginners.
I’ve been using illustrator since version 7 and this is by far the most succinct and simple explanation I’ve ever seen on the exact way the pen tool was intended to be used, and how best to wield it.
Glad it helped!
@@willpatersondesign your view on the pen too has definitely increased my efficiency with it.
Thank you!
And yet the almighty Will with another tutorial! Too bad I always end up watching your videos whenever I am _not_ near my computer. The urge to put that knowledge into practice. Thanks a lot for being here for us, Will.
Super helpful and informative! I’ll definitely be implementing this technique. I can’t tell you how much I’ve struggled with wobbly lines using the pen tool.
Great video and interesting way of using the regular guides as kind of placement markers where the points should go. Haven’t thought of that way before so I find it pretty useful
Glad it was helpful!
This is a game changer for me. My lines have improved greatly just by doing this. Thanks for this!
hundreds of pen tool tutorials and you have nailed it! Newbie here and thanks for the guides!
Im mostly self taught and discovered this after extended use of the eclipse tool. glad im doing it the right way
Hands down the most useful video on the subject!
The best Adobe Illustrator instructor! Best!
This is gold! Amazing tutorial. I will try it out. You made the tool understandable.
That’s the way I’ve always worked the pen tool. I had always noticed how the handles looked on circles and tried to emulate that in my drawing. I never knew how far out the handles should go a lot of times though. But this was great reassurance that I wasn’t the only one that tried to draw shapes the same way Illustrator does!
I am pretty new to Illustrator, only knew photoshop. I have always struggled with the pen tool! I think I get it now!!! Thank you so much!
You are so welcome!
Love love love this video. Very helpful! I saw the short as well, but this more in-depth explanation is even better. Thank you for sharing!
Glad it was helpful!
Subbed after coming to this video via the pen tip short. LEGENDARY!
Welcome!
I would agree with some of what was said, using fewer points is certainly important for getting nice smooth results, but I would disagree that one needs to align on a horizontal or vertical tangent whenever possible or that it is either "the way that vector works" or a "HACK". Sounds like a lot of folks didn't even know about aligning the anchors though, so I guess it helped those people.
Very nice content. I was a tattoo artist and illustrator for 12 years now getting into some graphic design. Never understood why the app was called illustrator not photoshop design. I just use my iPad Pro and use procreate but finally giving AI a go. Very helpful
I’ve watched this video about 4 times now to try and absorb as much info as I can :|
Love your videos and I’m very appreciative for them!
Happy to help! Hope what I said made sense!
Thousand likes if I could, I would have given. It was huge huge help. Very much appreciate, Will.
Glad it helped!
simply superb. Its looks hard but its actually really simple!!! Thanks for the video and sharing
Finally, a content creator who showcases fundamentally sound practices over cheap hacks and destructive edits.
Pressing the direct selection tool and then the pen tool will set up a tool history so then you can alternate quickly between direct selection tool and the pen tool even faster by holding the alt key.
You can also just hit the a and v key to switch to the pointers, and the p key to swap to the pen.
I do most of my tool switching with the keys. m to make rectangles, l to make circles. Lots of other too switches on the keyboard.
Pen tool is not dead :D :) awesome video in super quality :) Thanks
:D
Hands down the best pen tutorial ever! Brilliant major thanks
You just saved my life as an intern, thank you!
Thank you for explaining this thoroughly!
I finally have good tips on that! My grades will get a bit higher! Yay! Thank you very much for this video ^^
Thanks, Will
U always be teaching me sumpthin’
hUgz, Lee
The endpoints you are referring to are called the extrema. The far extremes where the anchor point lies in balance. It’s a mathematical term.
Its eight in the morning and i need to get this very curvy logo done asap. And this just saved my noob butt. Thank you sir.
Okay so I normally frown upon the "You've been using [this] wrong" type of videos but dare I say, I HAVE been using it wrong. Thanks mate.
Also helps using french curves when sketching
DUDE, love your videos! Keep on doing it exactly like this, thank you.
Wow, i have looked around for tutorials on the pen tool and this was absolutely the best one!
Glad it was helpful!
I wasn’t sure what I was looking for when I searched pen tool for illustrator but this was it ! Thank you 🙌🏻
Love it! I knew the rule of less is more regarding anchor points and making sure lines are vertical and horizontal but I had no idea to use them with the guide lines! Now I want to create a new logo for our own brand using this technique! Unless you want to ;) I designed our logo (not a logo designer) with my partners brief he gave me as a guide. That was almost 8 years ago! PS... its on the T-shirt i'm my profile pic! So many things going on with it and definitely needs an update!
Fantastic tutorial and explanation! Easy to follow with the explanation for why - and what to look for!
This explanation earned a solid subscribe
Excellent. As always! Thanks for your effort.
Awesome. I really never used it like this earlier. It helped a lot. Thank you so much!!
Thank you! Brilliantly explained
The best explanation! Finally
Glad you think so!
Never thought about using the pen tool this way! Amazing and ty :)
clicked video thinking it would be something silly like "if you hold spacebar you can move the point" or some other less know shortcut. Was pleasently surprised. Kudos
Outstanding tutorial. Man, that's an eye-opener right here. Thanks for sharing this. Grateful!
Loved it,made it so much easier
Great video. Welcome to my saved videos for future use folder
Thanks for the video, I am however lean towards curvature tool and drawing circles
bro, can you make full video about creating unique font using pentool... we love to see how you use pen tool hack effectively ..
It was just a few weeks ago that I thought I figured out the pen tool.😂 I will practice this. I usually end up with funky handles and not so smooth curves.
Thanks, I've been struggling with the pen tool - this was extremely helpful!
You're welcome!
Great vid! Thanks so much for posting!
Our pleasure!
Vital info, thanks!
amazing never thought of this !
Really helpful..!
Glad it was helpful!
Today I was thinking why Professioanls use Guides to make curves and logos in there projects now i know Cuase of you it will help ma a lot Thanks Sir I've learned a lot from you
can I ask you how long took you to master pen tool ?
Thank you for the awesome trick 👏
Some of us use Photoshop so it would be nice if sometimes you also show how it would work on photoshop too
Brilliant tutorial sir was really helpful 🙇🏻♀️
First of all amazing tips, comes in very handy actually!
About 3:33
I always wondered why you can't select two anchor points and just automatically make them equally long or extend them proportionally instead of trying to make them equal manually.
Is there a trick for that too?
Thank you buddy 😊
Awesome as always Will. I have never used the pen tool this way. I mean if I have used the pen tool like this, absolutely it wasn't intentional. Lol..
this video helped a hell of lot !!!!!!!! subscribed and thumbs up bro! Thanks
Awesome, thank you!
Amazing explanation
Finally thank you very much
this really helps man!
inspiring, thank you. ❤
Pen tool first, then smooth tool x1000, right?
hahaha
Good choice!
great tutorial, thanks a lot!
You're welcome!
Thank you Will, this is amazing! You’re video has helped me work this out in my brain….we must think alike! 😽
Glad it was helpful!
mind blown! thanks.
Glad it helped!
This is incredible stuff! Subscribing because I've never seen a technique communicated and presented so clearly
OMG! Wish Id known this when I was in school for design; I always HATED the pen tool. Nobody explained it right!
Thank you Will. Nice presentation. What is this guide you pull down at 2:17? Bounding box and guides are new to this beginner.
need this
wait but on the counter space of the "a" you had no right angles, can you explain why your rule doesn't apply here?
OMG amazing!
king. thank you
Love your channel. Question: in After Effects, those points are called vertices, not anchor points. I thought the anchor point was a singular point in space on a given layer defining the point from which a shape/object scales and rotates. Is this term different in Illustrator? Thank you! :)
How did you get the nice round handles? (instead of the standard tiny squares)
Thanks for a wonderful tutorial!
it's in the the illustraor settings. CMD + ,
@@willpatersondesign Edit->Preferences->Selection and anchor display ?
It shows only squares there.
Thanks for the reply
Thanks!
i like, then watch after.
Awesome!
And YT's algorithm is showing me this just now 😑 well, better late than never. Awesome tutorial! 👏👏👏👍 Promptly subscribed.