From the course: Drawing Vector Graphics: Isometric Illustration

Unlock the full course today

Join today to access over 22,600 courses taught by industry experts or purchase this course individually.

Creating irregular and organic isometric objects: Part 1

Creating irregular and organic isometric objects: Part 1 - Illustrator Tutorial

From the course: Drawing Vector Graphics: Isometric Illustration

Start my 1-month free trial

Creating irregular and organic isometric objects: Part 1

- Not everything you need to illustrate in an Isometric Illustration will conform to a circle, square, or rectangle. So how do you handle non-geometric objects in an isometric projection? Let me show you several examples of organic shapes in an Isometric illustration that technically breaks the aesthetic rules. As I've gone through this course and showed you various illustrations and how I created them in Isometric projection, you've already seen these objects appear in many of those illustrations. This represented the nature in all the illustrations I've shown you, whether they're trees or bushes. Actually, apparently, in my isometric world, there's only three types of trees, and one species of bush. I don't even know if you call it species, but anyway, these are irregular isometric objects, meaning they're not cubes. They're freeform, organic shapes, but you can still create them within an isometric framework so that they work well, and they're very forgivable, meaning, they might…

Contents