4/8/2024 0 Comments Blender donut tutorial text![]() Select the D, Copy, Paste, and Align it (with the first D), and go to Effect > Stylize > Inner Glow. I’ve hidden the icing shape in the Layers panel so we can focus on the cake portion of the donut letters. Set the stroke’s weight to 0.5pt and keep the Blend Mode at Normal. ![]() In the Transparency panel, set the Blend Mode to Soft Light.Ĭopy and Paste the D again and set the Fill to Null and the Stroke to the same light brown (something darker than the donut base color in case you’re not using tan) as done in Step 8. Copy and Paste the D and set the Fill to Null and the Stroke to light brown using the Color Palette, and then change the stroke’s weight to 3pt in the Stroke panel. Let’s start rendering the first donut letter. Also note below, the additional bite shapes taken out of other letters during Step 6. Deselect both and Delete the central hole. Use the Shape Builder Tool (Shift-M) to select the central hole. For the rounded shapes with holes in the center select both the icing shape and the donut letter. Using a bright color (in this case pink), draw flower-like shapes on rounded letters with hole ( O’s, D’s, B’s, P’s, etc) and dripping shapes on the tops of other letters. Now you’ve successfully taken a bite out of some of your donut letters. Select both the letter and new shape, and hit Minus Front in the Pathfinder panel. Using the Pencil Tool or Pen Tool (P), draw a scalloped shape overlapping the O, D, and T, and be sure to close the shape. Expand the stroked paths in Object > Expand so your letters become closed shapes. Alternatively, you can arrange with the Selection Tool (V). Keep your letters rounded by selecting rounded Caps and Corners in the Strokes panel.ĭraw all of your letters, and align them to the bottom by Selecting your letters and hitting Vertical Align Right (last icon in the top row) in the Align panel. Use a tan, brown, or yellow color for your donut base. Set the Stroke Weight in the Stroke panel to 12-20 points (something thick, but not so thick that the letter’s details aren’t easily made out). To do so, hit Enter with the Pencil Tool selected and, in the options’ panel that pops up, slide the Fidelity slider all the way to the right. If you set the Pencil Tool’s Options’ Fidelity to Smooth your paths will smooth out and be drawn more perfectly. Use the Pencil Tool (N) and carefully draw simple, rounded letters. In case you’d like to change your background color quickly, for whatever reason, draw another rectangle over the artboard, set the fill to your chosen color, and the Blend Mode in the Transparency panel to Color. Whatever your color theme, keep the darker color to the edges of the gradient. The gradient pictured below goes from light pink to dark pink. Select the rectangle you drew in Step 1, and apply a Radial Gradient using the Gradient Tool (G). Reduce the opacity of the Blend Group in the Transparency panel to 79%, and change its Blend Mode to Soft Light. ![]() Using a darker pink and the Line Segment Tool (\), I drew a line on the left of the artboard, Copied (Control-C) and Pasted (Control-V) it on the right and used the Blend Tool (W), seen below to create a simple striped background at 125 Steps (your step number may vary depending on the width of your line segments, size of your document, and how thin or thick you’d like the stripes to be). Use the Rectangle Tool (M) to create a shape larger than the artboard. Create a new document that is longer than it is wide (in this case 8″ x 4″, or so). ![]() In order to begin, I like to set up my background layer first. Topics Covered: Appearance Panel, Pencil Tool, Shape Builder Tool. ![]() Once you have the first letter, an entire alphabet of donut goodness awaits! In this tutorial, you’ll learn how to create a food-inspired font style entirely from scratch by manipulating shapes with gradients, custom brushes, and various vector and raster effects within the appearance panel. ![]()
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