First appeared on May 25, 2001
Last update on Saturday, November 17, 2001
Use the blend to add dimension to your text.
The first thing we will do is to draw a curve. Set the Fill color to None, and select the Pen Tool () by pressing P, and draw a smooth curve. You can hold down the Alt key while dragging anchor points to smooth parts of the curve, if you couldn't do it right the first time.
Select the Path-Type Tool () by pressing T a few times until the icon changes to the Path-Type Tool in the toolbox. Click on the curve, press Ctrl+T to bring up the Character palette if it isn't already active, and choose a font (I used 36-point Helvetica Bold). Now type something on the curve.
Click on the Selection Tool (), then click on your type. Change its color to a color of your choice (I used orange). Now press Ctrl+Shift+O to turn your text into editable objects, and press Ctrl+G to group them.
Now press V to select the Selection Tool, hold down the Alt button, and drag a copy of the type a little down. Change the copy's color (I used dark purple), and press Ctrl+Shift+[ to send it to back.
Press S to select the Scale tool (). Scale down the copy a bit while holding down the Shift key to preserve the aspect ratio. Then select the Selection Tool and move it to the desired position or leave it as is.
Press Ctrl+A to select both the original type and the copy.
Double click on the Blend Tool (). Set the Spacing to Specified Steps, and the number of steps to something between 25 and 50. If you are going to use the end result in a printed publication, you may prefer to use values higher than 50 for best results. Click on Ok, and now click on exactly the same points on both the original type and the copy (for example click on the lowermost anchor point on S on both types, and voila! you have a 3-D type.
This step is optional. If you want to have outlines around your type, press Ctrl+A to select it all. Press Ctrl+C to copy the selection to clipboard, then press Ctrl+B to paste it to the back of the original selection. Set the Stroke color to Black, and the stroke weight to 2 points (or more). Now you have an outline too!
This effect is not only easy to implement but open to modifications. You can change the shape of the text path or the location and size of the copy to create hundreds of different 3-D text effects. You can of course always edit your type in Photoshop to add more detail.
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What more can I say, other than Thank you for your time and help in putting this out in the Internet world so I would be able to finish my assignment for School?
Excellent !!
I've never used illustrator for doing 3d text,its never crossed my mind. I gave it a go, it turned out ok. I played around with the anchor points, achieved some pretty cool effects.