Tech
Well-known member
So when I read this from help menu...
"Transparency in gradients
Create gradients with two or more colors and define the opacity of any or all individual colors. By specifying different opacity values for the different color stops in your gradient, you can create gradients that fade in or out and reveal or hide underlying images."
...I began to wonder what if:
A designer decides to create a linear gradient with 3 stops, each stop with different opacity (in an effort to reveal underlying art/image), using two different spot color to create this marvelous gradient... Why stop here? Let's apply this gradient on a few objects within a complex illustration and then slap in a few blend modes and drop shadows...
So the real question is, will this be a masterpiece artwork or file from hell trying to get it print correctly or nothing crazy will happen or Adobe forgot to test this stuff prior to "improving" gradients in Illustrator?
"Transparency in gradients
Create gradients with two or more colors and define the opacity of any or all individual colors. By specifying different opacity values for the different color stops in your gradient, you can create gradients that fade in or out and reveal or hide underlying images."
...I began to wonder what if:
A designer decides to create a linear gradient with 3 stops, each stop with different opacity (in an effort to reveal underlying art/image), using two different spot color to create this marvelous gradient... Why stop here? Let's apply this gradient on a few objects within a complex illustration and then slap in a few blend modes and drop shadows...
So the real question is, will this be a masterpiece artwork or file from hell trying to get it print correctly or nothing crazy will happen or Adobe forgot to test this stuff prior to "improving" gradients in Illustrator?