Macromedia Studio MX Bible

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Lenses don't get used often enough. FreeHand has had them since version 8, and it introduced artists to transparency in vector art. A lens fill can only be applied to open or closed paths. To clarify that statement, if you elect to use Show Fill for New Open Paths in the Preferences menu, a fill appears as soon as you draw the third point in a path. I keep this option turned off so I can see what I'm drawing, but if you have it turned on, you can have any type of fill you want, including another lens fill.

At any rate, the lens fill is capable of doing many things, and an object can be covered with Lens fill effects up to eight deep. The ninth lens fill negates the bottom fill in the drawing stack. These fills are usually placed above other objects in your drawing or layout because they affect anything beneath themselves. All lens fills convert spot colors to CMYK values for printing. This isn't a concern if you're working for the Web, but it's a good thing to remember if you're printing a map or brochure. Keep in mind that this is a very memory-intensive operation, and you can choke the best printer if you have too many effects going at the same time. You're better off thinking the project out a little and being efficient in your drawing. A lens fill can create any and all of the following effects:

A lens fill cannot be applied to everything. You cannot get a lens fill effect on an EPS file, or on a clipping path. You won't see any difference if you apply a lens fill to live text. However, if you convert the text to paths, its fill can be a lens fill. Remember to keep a live version of the text somewhere safe on another page or on the Pasteboard in case you need to make changes or adjustments in fonts later.

In the Lens Fill panel, you have the following three options to check:

No gradient lens fills

As much as FreeHand artists would like to see it, a lens fill doesn't provide a way to get a gradient of any kind. Workarounds exist, but they stand a good chance of choking the printer, and aren't generally recommended. You can find workaround details at the FreeHand Source (www.freehandsource.com), where Ian Kelleiegh has compiled a large mass of FreeHand tricks.

I use the Lighten Lens to cover a photograph that I'm tracing. (I place it on a layer between the photo and my drawing and lock both the photo and Lens fill layers.) The reduced contrast makes it easier to see the paths that I'm drawing.

My friend uses Lens fills with Snapshot selected so she can make a dynamic master page layout of business cards. This would also work for disk labels or any other printing situation that requires duplicate multiple images.

  1. Make a 2-inch by 3.5-inch page and lay out one business card with the information that is common to all the cards. Be sure to convert all text to paths, and keep a copy of the live text somewhere safe in the document in case you need to make changes later. You can also put guidelines where they're appropriate.

  2. Add a letter-sized page, and place a vertical guideline at the center.

  3. Draw a rectangular selection the same size as the business card, and give it the Magnify (set to 1), Lighten or Darken (set to zero), or Transparency (also set to zero) Lens fill.

  4. Turn on Snapshot and Centerpoint.

Cloudy lens outlook?

You do stand the chance of ending up with an orphaned lens fill. That's when you have a document containing a lens fill, but the elements that make up the lens are not to be found. You can't ungroup it or split it, and a Cut Contents command does absolutely nothing. You can tell that there's a Paste Inside going on by the Centerpoint icon, but nothing seems to work. At that point, check the Fill panel and hope for a lens fill. Keep in mind that FreeHand enables you to export documents in older versions of FreeHand — even versions that didn't have lens fills.

Just export the orphaned lens as an older FreeHand file. Don't try to change the type of fill it is, or attempt to remove it — just choose File ® Export ® FreeHand 7. Because there were no lens fills at that time, the document works with what it has, which happens to end up being a simple clipping path. Open the new FreeHand 7 file in FreeHand 10, select the lens, and choose Edit ® Cut Contents. You get more than you bargained for — any element that was under the lens appears in this new document, and it is in its full, uncropped state. If the Magnify lens was used, the elements are enlarged to the extent the lens was set.


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