Adobe Illustrator

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  • IZMIR, TURKEY - MARCH 10: A computer screen displays Photoshop logo on the Photoshop program in Izmir, Turkey on March 10, 2020. Mahmut Serdar Alakus / Anadolu Agency

    Adobe's Black Friday sale discounts Creative Cloud plans by 25 percent

    by 
    Kris Naudus
    Kris Naudus
    11.17.2020

    First-time subscribers can sign up for a $40 monthly Creative Cloud plan until December 3rd.

  • Adobe Illustrator on iPad

    Adobe Illustrator arrives on the iPad

    by 
    Billy Steele
    Billy Steele
    10.20.2020

    Almost a year after it was announced, Adobe Illustrator for iPad is ready to go to work.

  • Panic's free ShrinkIt turns humongous Illustrator PDFs into tiny ones

    by 
    Steve Sande
    Steve Sande
    02.18.2010

    The brilliant minds at Panic noticed that something interesting was happening with PDF files created by Adobe Illustrator. Like many developers, Panic uses Adobe Illustrator to create icons and other image resources for their applications. The resulting PDF files, which were relatively "big-boned" (a politically-correct way of saying "fat"), would magically shrink in size when they were run through Apple's Mac OS X PDF processing. Apple's method is used when you save a PDF from Preview, which explains why most of the time those files are fairly small in size. Being the intelligent chaps that they are, the Panic engineers decided to look into the cause of this. What did they find? "Will started digging into the files and brother, you won't believe what he found. Swatches, patterns, preview bitmaps, all sort of metadata; even though we'd specifically turned off all the extra options when saving from Illustrator: Preserve Illustrator Editing Capabilities, Embed Page Thumbnails, etc." Apparently just opening the obese PDFs in Preview and then saving them would shrink the file sizes dramatically. Rather than force their staff to go through this process each time they found a large Illustrator PDF, Panic did what most developers would do and wrote an application to automate the process. Devs can simply take a big batch of files, like the contents of an application's Resources folder, drop 'em onto ShrinkIt (download link), and watch the file sizes magically shrink. According to Panic, ShrinkIt can reduce an app bundle size by 4 megabytes. While ShrinkIt is a Panic-internal utility, the company has made it available to the world for free. Please note that ShrinkIt is primarily made for shrinking simple vector-resource PDFs, and probably won't work well on press-ready PDFs.