2 Attachment(s)
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
Thanks very much Gary for the Tile and your time, much appreciated. I have made to quick tiles to see the effect and they look really good so will do some more experimenting later :D
Thanks alot,
Stygg
2 Attachment(s)
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
Tea for Two and a candy/ice-cream/cupcake/lolly thingy
Attachment 89790
Attachment 89791
Bit worried about how 'cute' some of mine are turning out :eek: ...............just to confirm I am a happy married man, I love Rugby and never dress up in my wifes clothes on Weekdays.
2 Attachment(s)
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
I like the tea time one, it reminds me of Wedgwood Jasperware.
Edit: In fact the jasperware idea inspired this :) I used the Celebrated Burgeon Ornaments TG font with some bevels to put together this tile. It was a bit fiddly I had to go in with the eraser to make the center where the two large burgeon glyphs overlaped and erase out some of the overlapping bits to make the center look better.
Attachment 89793
Attachment 89794
2 Attachment(s)
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
@Frances: Nicely done, and nice to recycle the Burgeon set, eh? :)
@Antspants: Do not stop what you're doing simply because your patterns aren't all footballs and beer cans! If you're fluent in art styles that appeal to both women and men, then you're twice the creative individual that some profess to be!
This took a lot of time! Mapping out the shapes=90% of the time, using the Rounded Bevel preset took 10%.
Attachment 89806
My Best,
Gary
2 Attachment(s)
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
Here's one that I didn't design to tile vertically; I copped the feeling of it from some of Alphons Mucha's work, Art Nouveau period in France:
Attachment 89808
Here's the trick: set up your drawing so it tiles. Do 3 across and three from top to bottom if you need to. Then use the Bevel tool on all shapes. Then set up a background shape at the center of the composition, and clip to it. Doing this keeps the Bevel areas continuous as the pattern repeats.
My Best,
Gary
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
Both of those are really nice, that top one looks like it took a lot of patience as well as time!
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
Well, yes, Frances, it took perseverance, too, because these two are jigsaw puzzle pieces—there is no real "background to the elements.
Which gives me an idea; I'm going to do a seamless tiling jigsaw puzzle!
The more visually muted you make patterns, the more uses you might find for them, I'm discovering.
—Gary
3 Attachment(s)
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
That jigsaw puzzle sounds interesting.
One use for seamless tiles is digital scrapbooking Digi-scrappers call them papers but really they are just seamless tiles. I put together this seamless tile using a quick shape starburst pulled around with the quick shape tool until I got something I liked. I used warm earthy tones and I used my tile as a scrapbooking paper. I used the same quickshape and a plain rectangle with shadowing and some of the same colours from the tile to create a quick layout
Attachment 89813
Attachment 89814
Attachment 89815
2 Attachment(s)
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
I think I'm very close to realizing a jigsaw puzzle seamless pattern, but me, I'm out of steam.
If anyone else would like to pick up my work and finish it, all power and credit to you!
Attachment 89817
Happy Memorial Day, America!
Lift a glass to those we've lost,
Gary
2 Attachment(s)
Re: May 2012 Tutorial - Create Seamless Patterns in Xara Designer Pro X
Microkaleidoscope uses two tagged colors, both at the start of the color line in the document, so you can make this two tone design any two colors you like.
Attachment 89821
The above is just a composite to show how the two colors can be changed to make a continuous design, just with modulated colors.
My Best,
Gary