Go to Illustrator to scale a pixel-based image? Illustrator is a vector-based program. You should always scale images in Photoshop. Hence it is called Photoshop.I do the tough jobs in Photoshop, and I really should have gone to Illustrator to solve the scale problem with your head
Shows you how much I know. I thought that was one of the advantages of a vector based program, that you could change the scale of something without losing the definition. It seemed that way the one big project I did in Illustrator.
I think that's a good explanation. Although I'm not sure Outpost4 has a daughter.Shows you how much I know. I thought that was one of the advantages of a vector based program, that you could change the scale of something without losing the definition. It seemed that way the one big project I did in Illustrator.
Well, this half-true. Any art you create in Illustrator or another vector program (like Corel Draw) can be re-scaled up to infinity because of how vector art works. That's why NCC-1701 made the distinction of pixel art. Pixel artwork is made with each pixel in an image of a given size having a color value (like the photograph of you and your daughter or any other jpeg file you'd see on the Web).
Vector Art, which is what Illustrator uses, is something completely different. Instead of data stored on a color-per-pixel basis, vector art stores instructions for the program on where to put a line, what color to make it, how long it should be, etc.
It might help to think along these terms: pixel art (sometimes called bitmap art) is the visual analog of a .wav or .mp3 file... it is the actual representational data of the image, like these audio files are made from actual "recorded" sound.
Vector art on the other hand is more like a midi file... not really "art" in it's own right, but rather instructions for the program that can be changed and scaled up or down without any loss of data.
Does that make sense?
Hm, that's interesting. What kind of music? Are you doing it professionally? I ask because I have a band (well, we're just two guys, but that's enough) and getting the audio right is one of our biggest problems.Hey, I'm an audio guy. I'm playing catch-up on this image stuff. Can I send you a CD of one of the bands I've recorded?Now that I know how to do.
Thanks.I think that's a good explanation.
Although I'm not sure Outpost4 has a daughter.![]()
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