Illustrator
The Illustration Work Andre Junget
The USA based freelancer, Andre Junget has a vibrant and full of life portfolio on our website. With a wide selection of designs displayed, Andre has managed to create the pieces in a collective fashion, where his familiar designs relate to a specific topic.
This self-taught illustrator began his career in 1991 and has won Awards of excellence for his designs in 2005, 2008 and 2009 from ASAI. The illustration he displays range from classic automobiles, architecture and house portraits just to name a few of his precise illustrations.
His work identifies his drawing in detail, those designs without colour show the intensity of the object he has drawn and you can see the effort put into the illustrations with the shading and immense detail.
Andre explains his love for architecture as “the way it used to be”. Those architectural designs are based off home-fronts, building exteriors and landscapes. These will contain water colours, pencil and pen and ink designs, drawn by the hand of Andre. Take a look at his piece, Water Villa, which shows his skill with water colours. The piece is set on a blue background and a designed boarder to add more visual effect.
Techniques For Moving Objects In Adobe Illustrator
Because Adobe Illustrator is a vector-based drawing environment, each Illustrator drawing consists of independent elements or objects. Much of the process of creating a drawing consists of transforming objects, either to customise them or to derive other objects. In this article, we will examine some of the key techniques used when carry out such transformations.
For a start, all transformations can be carried out in three different way: using the selection or free transform tool, using the transform tools (scale, rotate, shear and reflect) or using the options in the Transform sub-menu of the Object menu. Using the selection or free transform tools is very much like transforming vector and other objects in most non-specialist programs such as Microsoft Word or PowerPoint.
One of the most basic kinds of transformation is movement. To move an object with the pointer or free transform tool, simply position the cursor over the object, click and hold down the mouse button and drag the object to a new position. If you hold down the Shift key as you do so, you will constrain the movement of the object to the horizontal, vertical or diagonal plane.



