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Using multiple artboards
Artboard overviewArtboards represent
the regions that can contain printable artwork. You can use artboards
as crop areas for printing or placement purposes—they work the same way
as crop areas work in Illustrator CS3. Multiple artboards are useful
for creating a variety of things such as multiple page PDFs, printed
pages with different sizes or different elements, independent elements
for websites, video storyboards, or individual items for animation
in Adobe Flash or After Effects. Note: If
you created crop areas in a Illustrator CS3 document, the crop areas
will be converted to artboards in CS4. You may be prompted to specify
how you want the crop areas to convert.
You can have
1 to 100 artboards per document depending on size. You can specify
the number of artboards for a document when you first create it,
and you can add and remove artboards at any time while working in
a document. You can create artboards in different sizes, resize
them by using the Artboard tool , and
position them anywhere on the screen—even overlapping one another.
To see a video
on using multiple artboards, see www.adobe.com/go/lrvid4016_ai.
Viewing artboards and the canvasYou can view the page boundaries
in relation to an artboard by showing page tiling (View >
Show Print Tiling). When page tiling is on, the printable and nonprintable
areas are represented by a series of solid and dotted lines between the
outermost edge of the window and the printable area of the page.
Each artboard is bounded
by solid lines and represents the maximum printable area. To hide
the artboard boundaries, choose View > Hide Artboards.
The canvas is the area outside the artboard that extends to the
edge of the 220 inch square window. The canvas represents a space
on which you can create, edit, and store elements of artwork before
moving them onto an artboard. Objects placed onto the canvas are
visible on‑screen, but they do not print.
To center an artboard and
zoom it to fit the screen, click the artboard number in the status
bar, located at the bottom of the application window.
View full size graphic Illustration window - A.
- Printable area (determined by the specified printer)
- B.
- Canvas
- C.
- Artboard
Printing and exporting artboardsAll artboards in a document
share the same media type format, such as Print. You can print each
artboard individually, tiled, or combined into one page. If you
save a multiple-artboard Illustrator document to a previous version
of Illustrator, such as CS3, you can choose to save each artboard
as a separate file, along with a master file that includes all artboards
merged.
You
can preview artboards from the print dialog before printing them.
The print settings you choose are applied to all of the artboards
you selected to print.
By
default all artwork is cropped to an artboard and all artboards
print as individual pages. Use the Range option in the Print dialog
box to print specific pages, select Ignore Artboards and specify
placement options to combine all art onto a single page or tile
the artwork as desired.
Artboard optionsYou
open the Artboard Options dialog box by double-clicking the Artboard tool , or
clicking the Artboard tool and then clicking Artboard Options button in
the Control panel.
- Preset
- Specifies
artboard dimensions. These presets set the ruler Pixel Aspect Ratio
appropriately for the specified output.
- Width and Height
- Specifies
the size of the artboard.
- Orientation
- Specifies
portrait or landscape page orientation.
- Constrain Proportions
- Keeps
the aspect ratio of the artboard intact if you manually resize it.
- X: and Y: Position
- Specifies
the position of the artboard according to Illustrator’s workspace
rulers. To view these rulers, choose View > Show Rulers.
- Show Center Mark
- Displays
a point in the center of the artboard.
- Show Cross Hairs
- Displays
cross lines through the center of each side of the artboard.
- Show Video Safe Areas
- Displays
guides that represent the areas that fall inside the viewable area
of video. You want to keep all text and art that must be viewable
to users inside the video safe areas.
- Ruler Pixel Aspect Ratio
- Specifies
the pixel aspect ratio used for the rulers.
- Fade Region Outside Artboard
- Displays
the area outside of the artboard a darker shade than the area inside
the artboard when the Artboard tool is active.
- Update While Dragging
- Keeps
the area outside of the artboard darker as you drag to resize the
artboard. If this is not selected, the outside area displays in
the same color as inside the artboard while resizing.
- Artboards
- Indicates
how many artboards exist.
Create an artboard- Do any
of the following:
To
create a custom artboard, select the Artboard tool , and
drag in the workspace to define the shape, size, and location.
To
use a preset artboard, double-click the Artboard tool, select a
preset in the Artboard Options dialog box, and click OK. Drag the
artboard to position it where you want.
To
create an artboard within an active artboard, click Shift and drag
using the Artboard tool.
To
duplicate an existing artboard, select the Artboard tool, click
to select the artboard you want to duplicate, and click the New
Artboard button in the Control panel ; then
click where you want to place the duplicated artboard. To create
multiple duplicates, Alt-click as many times as you want. Or, using
the Artboard tool, Alt-drag (Windows) or Option-drag (Mac OS) the
artboard you want to duplicate.
To
duplicate an artboard with the contents, select the Artboard tool,
click to select the Move/Copy Artwork With Artboard icon on the
Control panel , press
Alt (Windows) or Option (Mac OS), and then drag.
If you
want the artwork to contain a bleed, make sure that there’s enough
artwork beyond the artboard rectangle to accommodate the bleed.
- To
commit the artboard and exit the artboard-editing mode, click a
different tool in the Tools panel or click Esc.
Edit or delete artboardsYou
can create multiple artboards for your document, but only one can
be active at a time. When you have multiple artboards defined, you
can view them all by selecting the Artboard tool. Each artboard
is numbered for easy reference. You can edit or delete an artboard
at any time, and you can specify different artboards each time you
print or export.
Select
the Artboard tool , and
then do any of the following:To
set an artboard as the active artboard, click it. (Clicking in or
drawing over an artboard using a different tool will also make the
artboard tool active.) If artboards overlap, the artboard with the
left edge closest to the click location becomes the active artboard.
To
resize an artboard, position the pointer on an edge or corner until
the cursor changes to a double-sided arrow, and then drag to adjust.
Or, specify new Width and Height values in the Control panel.
To
move an artboard and its contents, click to select the Move/Copy
Artwork With Artboard icon on the Control panel , and
then position the pointer in the artboard and drag. Or, specify
new X and Y values in the Control panel.
To
move an artboard without its contents, click to deselect the Move/Copy Artwork
With Artboard icon on the Control panel, and then position the pointer
in the artboard and drag. Or, specify new X and Y values in the
Control panel.
To
delete an artboard, click the artboard and press Delete, click Delete in the
Control panel, or click the Delete icon in
an artboard’s upper-right corner. You can delete all but the last
remaining artboard.
To
rotate between artboards, press Alt (Windows) or Option (Mac OS)
and click an arrow key.
To
view artboards and their contents as outlines, right-click and choose Outline.
To see artwork again, right-click and choose Preview.
Display artboard rulers, center mark, crosshairs, or safe areaYou
can choose to display a center mark, cross hairs, video safe markers,
and rulers around an artboard. Rulers are useful when you’re working
with art intended for export to video. The numbers on the rulers
reflect device-specific pixels, regardless of the measurement unit
specified in preferences. The default Pixel Aspect Ratio (PAR) for
Illustrator is 1.0 (for square pixels)—this value changes according
to the preset you choose either in the Artboard Options dialog box
or the New Document dialog box.
If
you’re using nonsquare pixels, the ruler provides for easier device-specific
pixel calculations. For example, if you specify an artboard of 100
x100 Illustrator points, and you want to know the exact size in
device-dependent pixels before exporting the file for use in a NTSC
DV Widescreen, you can set the artboard ruler in Illustrator to
use a pixel aspect ratio of 1.2 (for wide pixels) and the ruler
will reflect the change and display the artboard as 83 x100 device
pixels (100/1.2 = 83.333).  Artboard with rulers
Show or hide artboard rulers- Choose
View > Show Artboard Rulers or Hide Artboard Rulers.
- (Optional)
Set a value for Ruler Pixel Aspect Ratio in the Artboard Options dialog
box. (To open this dialog box, double-click the Artboard tool.)
Display center mark, cross hairs, or video safe areas- Double-click
the Artboard tool
in
the Tools panel, or, with the Artboard tool active, click the Artboard
Options icon in
the Control panel.
- In
the Display section, select the options you’d like displayed in
your artboards.
Note: You
can also set or remove the center point by clicking the Show Center
Mark icon  in
the Control panel.
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