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Abstract & Original "Origami" Effect


In this Adobe Illustrator tutorial, Guilherme will be walking you through a special technique of his, he calls it a unique "origami" effect. He's used this technique many times in many very different and unique abstract pieces, such as:

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 1

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 2

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 3

Here is what we'll be making:

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 4

About the Author

Guilherme Damasceno is a 17-year-old Brazilian designer. He has been using Adobe Photoshop for about five years, sometimes adding some Adobe Illustrator to his works. Most of them are experimental, done for pleasure, and this scenery helped him to develop some unique techniques with both of these programs.

Currently he is studying Physics of Materials at Federal University of Uberlandia.

Introduction

OK, let's start with the Origami drawing.

It's not a really hard thing to be done, just need some creativity to be discovered and well-used.

First of all: choose your color scheme. It can be in many colors you want. I like the black and white one, but you can try some different ideas. That's a personal taste.

So make your first rectangle with the Rectangle Tool. Be sure of the colors of the Stroke and Fill colors if you're going to make with more than two filling colors. Then, pick up the Direct Selection Tool (shortcut is A) and select just a whole side of the square (can be any side).

Next, click on any part of it, but not on the corners, and try to make it with some perspective, but just on that side. Your result should look like this:

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 5

Step 2

Select the whole shape and copy (ctrl+c) then paste in front (ctrl+v). Hold shift and, with the Selection Tool (shortcut is V), move the second shape trying to make a column with them. Then duplicate the column and make a more complex shape. It's not supposed to be 3x3, 4x4 - it can be whatever you want.

Keep doing it and you will have something like this:

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 6

Step 3

If you want to make the piece with more than two filling colors, you must color the shapes right now. I'm going to use pink, yellow, blue and white:

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 7

Step 4

Select the full composition you got until now and duplicate it in a random way, rotating and changing the sizes. We want to achieve something like this:

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 8

Step 5

Now comes the nice part. Pick up the Direct Selection Tool (shortcut A) and select some parts of the object, click, hold and drag. Don't do it with big parts of it, or it will get too boring.

You must get some part like the one in the picture below.

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 9

Step 6

Repeat it a few times, but nothing too exaggerated. Keep in mind that this is useful for minimalistic stuff, so try to make something soft despite of polygonal shapes, and the distortion you're going to make depends on your goal with the origami.

If you're using a stock, think in how the origami will interact of it; if you're doing an abstract artwork, remember your main idea for the piece. And here are four of my distortion results - two in this color scheme and two in the black & white scheme:

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect image 10

Step 7

You can make a lot of origamis just with one creation process, getting the composition in Step 4 copied or in your ctrl+c and then distorting it in different ways again. Merge some results to get a well-composed origami. I merged my two coloured results:

Abstract and Original 'Origam' Effect Tutorial: Final Result

Completion

Thanks for reading this tutorial! I hope you found it useful.



Author's URL: Design Blurb
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Vector graphics is the creation of digital images through a sequence of commands or mathematical statements that place lines and shapes in a given two-dimensional or three-dimensional space. More Vector Graphics: Most Popular Materials | Fresh Materials | More Adobe Illustrator Tutorials at Vectorials.com

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