Exporting your UI for App design using Illustrator CC 2017

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Course contents
SECTION: 15
Cheat Sheet 5:23

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Course info

45 lessons / 4 hours

Overview

UI design skills are one of the most employable opportunities of our lifetime. In this course you’ll learn how to design a professional website in Adobe Illustrator. We’ll start right at the basics of Illustrator and work our way through to building professional UI designs. This course doesn’t cover how to code a website but focuses on the design processes that professional UI designers use when working.

This is a project based class for students who are new to the world of app & web design. I created this for people nervous about changing their careers into the world of user interface design.



We’ll build a professional portfolio website. You can use this course to build your own portfolio website (the one you’ve been putting off for years). You’ll learn how to design desktop, tablet and mobile versions of your website. You’ll learn what you’ll need to deliver at the end of a project to your client.

This course is for people serious about becoming a User Interface design professional.

Know that I’ll be around to help - if you get lost you can drop a post on the video 'Questions and Answers' below each video and I'll be sure to get back to you.

Now it’s time to upgrade your skills, get that better job, and impress your clients.


What are the requirements?

  • You'll need a copy of Adobe Illustrator CC 2017 or above. A free trial can be downloaded from Adobe.

  • No previous design skills are needed.

  • No previous Illustrator skills are needed. 

What am I going to get from this course?

  • 45 lectures 4 Hours 7 minutes of content!

  • You'll learn to design a website with in Adobe Illustrator.

  • User Interface essentials. 

  • 27 Completed files so you never fall behind. 

  • Learn how to wireframe at all levels

  • How to design for a responsive website. 

  • Downloadable exercise files & cheat sheet.

  • Forum support from me and the rest of the BYOL crew.

  • Techniques used by professional website designers.

  • Professional workflows and shortcuts.

  • A wealth of other resources and websites to help your new career path.

What is the target audience?

  • This course is for beginners. Aimed at people new to the world of web and UI design. While no previous Illustrator experience is necessary.

Course duration 4 hours

Daniel Scott

Daniel Scott

Founder of Bring Your Own Laptop & Chief Instructor

instructor

I discovered the world of design as an art student when I stumbled upon a lab full of green & blue iMac G3’s. My initial curiosity around using the computer to create ‘art’ developed into a full-blown passion, eventually leading me to become a digital designer and founder of Bring Your Own Laptop.

Sharing and teaching are a huge part of who I am. As a certified Adobe instructor, I've had the honor of winning multiple Adobe teaching awards at their annual MAX conference. I see Bring Your Own Laptop as the supportive community I wished for when I was first starting out and intimidated by design. Through teaching, I hope to bring others along for the ride and empower my students to bring their stories, labors of love, and art into the world.
True to my Kiwi roots, I've lived in many places, and currently, I reside in Ireland with my wife and kids.

Downloads & Exercise files

Transcript

All right. This video is gonna be more about exporting for app. Let's pretend we're not building a  desktop and tablet version. We're just building a mobile app. So we've kind of built some icons to be used in here, okay? So it's very easy.

Okay, let's say I want  to export these two guys together, maybe separately. So I'm gonna ungroup them, okay? And you go in like be Kiwi. Actually, we'll just use the Kiwi at the moment. You could drag all of these in one go. I'm just gonna do this guy.

This guy's  gonna be called the Kiwi. And what they're gonna need is,  let's get rid of all of these. Is all you need to do is there's iOS  and Android, you're probably developing for both,  or maybe just for iOS, okay. Or just for Android. But, so let's say we're doing it  for an Apple product, okay? And we're working with an Apple developer,  and you need iOS graphics, click on iOS, okay?

And what they do is they need a scale  of one, two, and three. Okay? So this size, double the size  and three times the size to work  with all the different sizes  that they've got in terms of their screens. Okay? And they're really strict on their naming conventions. So we're gonna leave the suffix in there, okay?

Then we're gonna click export. We're gonna export it to this one here. Great. And we should find Kiwi in here. Where are you? Kiwi.

Kiwi. There he is there. Okay,  so we've got the three versions that they're gonna need. There's the standard p and g, which is the one size. Then there's, uh, so there's a p  and G at one scale, then at times two,  and then at times three. Okay.

And those are the, the kinds  of files that they're gonna need. So that every graphic that you make,  you're gonna need, uh, four versions. They're probably just gonna use these three, okay? But give them the SVG as well, okay? And if you're gonna do the same stuff  for Android, okay, it's really similar. Get rid of these guys.

Click on Android. They just have a different naming convention  and they have lots of different sizes for their apps. You can see there's even a smaller low DPI, medium, DPI,  high DPIX, uh, extra large high. It goes right up to x xx high, D, p, I. Okay, so there's up to four scale. Some of the LG phones have l um, yeah,  have some huge big retina screens.

Click. Export. Same thing. We're gonna have Kiwi. Oh, there's already a Kiwi. SVG.

It's okay, but you'll be giving them these versions, okay? That these are the versions that'll go for Android. So you might be doing both or you might be doing just one  or the other, but that's what they're gonna expect. Every graphic's gonna have all this,  and it's gonna have this explicit naming convention here. Um, I know that Android, I think works slightly differently. They end up in different folders.

Okay? So that's something you might have to talk  to your developer about, about how they want them. Um, probably you can just give 'em this way  and they'll split them into their  folders that they need to go into. Alright? So that's exporting for app development. And the one thing to think of, uh,  like we did in the previous tutorial,  is looking at pixel perfect.

Okay? Especially if you've got any of those kind  of horizontal and vertical lines, mainly  because we're using these p gs, these pixel versions. All right? That's it for that video. See you the next one.
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