NHS DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY 2
  • Home
  • Projects
    • Logo >
      • Planning your Logo
      • Scanning Your Rough
      • Practice Vectoring
      • Setting up to Vector your Logo
      • Planning Your Vector
      • Vectoring Issues
    • Tips Book
    • Dramatic Lighting
    • Sequence Photography
    • Creative Edges
    • Panoramic Photo
    • A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words
    • High Contrast Action Set
    • 3D in Photoshop
    • Shift Tilt
    • Lomo
    • Oil Painting
    • HDR (High Dynamic Range)
    • Animated GIF's >
      • Animating From a Still Photo
      • Animating from a Series of Photos
    • Triptych
    • Converting Color Photos to Black & White
    • Making a Website >
      • Using Weebly
      • Making a Banner
  • Lessons
    • Histograms
    • Adjusting Tone with Levels
    • Adjusting Tone with Curves
    • Correcting Color
    • Lighting
    • Black and White Photography
    • Night Photography
  • Links
  • Untitled

Planning Your Vector

With the document set up and ready to vector, it usually helps to take a moment and look at the pieces of the image. How should they be drawn? Do you need a bunch of layers? Where does one piece end and the next begin? We discussed this when we practiced vectoring the Penn State logo. explained how it's really made of three pieces and then laid out a plan for replicating it. The videos below go into the same detail on tow different examples. Hopefully by watching them it will help you to create a plan for your vector.

nhsbobcats.org

sapphire

Mr. Tate's blog

techgeek.pro

Copyright © 2015