Adobe Illustrator 2005 ❲99% TRENDING❳
Working on a laptop (like the 12-inch PowerBook G4) was an act of patience. Fans would spin to jet-engine volume when you applied a complex blend or a scatter brush. Without YouTube tutorials (YouTube launched in late 2005, but barely), designers learned from books ( Real World Illustrator by Mordy Golding was the bible), magazine CDs, and forums like Worth1000.com and Adobe's own user-to-user forums . You'd download .ai files from Vectorstock (founded 2004) and reverse-engineer them.
But the interface was also unforgiving. To adjust a gradient, you had to open the Gradient palette, then adjust sliders, then maybe open the Color palette, then — to apply that gradient to a stroke — click a tiny button labeled "Apply Gradient Across Stroke," which half the user base never found. Zooming was done via a dropdown menu or the zoom tool; scroll-wheel zoom was unreliable. Smart Guides existed but were primitive. Live Trace? Not yet. That would come in CS2. In 2005, the professional design workflow was still ruled by QuarkXPress 6 for layout, Photoshop 7 or CS for raster, and Illustrator for everything that couldn't be done in either. Logos, icons, technical illustrations, packaging dielines, t-shirt graphics, and — increasingly — web mockups for sites that would be sliced into tables. adobe illustrator 2005
Adobe Illustrator 2005 wasn't just software. It was a craft. And for those who mastered it, it felt like holding a lightsaber: elegant, dangerous, and utterly yours. Working on a laptop (like the 12-inch PowerBook
